Russian Political, Economic, and
Security Issues and U.S. Interests
Jim Nichol, Coordinator
Specialist in Russian and Eurasian Affairs
September 19, 2012
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RL33407
CRS Report for Congress
Pr
epared for Members and Committees of Congress
Russian Political, Economic, and Security Issues and U.S. Interests
Summary
Russia made some uneven progress in democratization during the 1990s, but this limited progress
was reversed after Vladimir Putin rose to power in 1999-2000, according to many observers.
During this period, the State Duma (lower legislative chamber) came to be dominated by
government-approved parties, gubernatorial elections were abolished, and the government
consolidated ownership or control over major media and industries, including the energy sector.
The Putin government showed a low regard for the rule of law and human rights in suppressing
insurgency in the North Caucasus, according to critics. Dmitriy Medvedev, Putin’s long-time
protégé, was elected president in early 2008 and immediately designated Putin as prime minister.
President Medvedev continued Putin’s policies. In August 2008, the Medvedev-Putin “tandem”
directed military operations against Georgia and recognized the independence of Georgia’s
separatist South Ossetia and Abkhazia, actions condemned by most of the international
community. In late 2011, Putin announced that he would return to the presidency and that
Medvedev would become prime minister. This announcement and flawed Duma elections at the
end of the year spurred popular protests, which the government addressed by launching some
reforms (such as the return of gubernatorial elections) and by holding pro-Putin rallies. In March
2012, Putin was (re-)elected president by a wide margin. The day after his inauguration on May 7,
the legislature confirmed Medvedev as prime minister. Since then, the Putin administration
appears to be tightening restrictions on freedom of assembly and other human rights.
Russia’s economy began to recover from the Soviet collapse in 1999, led mainly by oil and gas
exports, but the decline in oil and gas prices and other aspects of the global economic downturn
beginning in 2008 contributed to an 8% drop in gross domestic product in 2009. Since then, rising
world oil prices have bolstered the economy. Russian economic growth continues to be dependent
on oil and gas exports. The economy also is plagued by an unreformed healthcare system and
unhealthy lifestyles; low domestic and foreign investment; and high rates of crime, corruption,
capital flight, and unemployment.
Russia’s armed forces now number less than one million, down from 4.3 million Soviet troops in
1986. Troop readiness, training, morale, and discipline have suffered, and much of the arms
industry has become antiquated. Russia’s economic growth during most of the 2000s allowed it to
increase defense spending to begin to address these problems. Stepped-up efforts have been
launched to restructure the armed forces to improve their quality. Opposition among some in the
armed forces, mismanagement, and corruption have seemingly slowed this restructuring.
After the Soviet Union’s collapse, the United States sought a cooperative relationship with
Moscow and supplied almost $19 billion in aid for Russia from FY1992 through FY2010 to
encourage democracy and market reforms and in particular to prevent the proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction (WMD). In the past, U.S.-Russia tensions on issues such as NATO
enlargement and proposed U.S. missile defenses in Eastern Europe were accompanied by some
cooperation between the two countries on anti-terrorism and non-proliferation. Russia’s 2008
conflict with Georgia, however, threatened such cooperation. The Obama Administration has
worked to “re-set” relations with Russia. The Administration has hailed the signing of a new
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty in April 2010, the approval of new sanctions against Iran by
Russia and other members of the U.N. Security Council in June 2010, the accession of Russia to
the World Trade Organization on August 22, 2012, and the cooperation of Russia in Afghanistan
as signifying the “re-set” of bilateral relations. Congress is considering legislation(H.R. 6156 and
S. 3406) to grant Russia Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR) status.
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Contents
Most Recent Developments ............................................................................................................. 1
Post-Soviet Russia and Its Significance for the United States......................................................... 2
Political and Human Rights Developments ..................................................................................... 2
Background................................................................................................................................ 2
Putin’s First Two Presidential Terms: The Tightening of Presidential Power ........................... 3
The 2008-2012 Medvedev-Putin “Tandem”.............................................................................. 5
Government Moves Against Non-Favored Political Parties and Leaders in the
Period Before the 2011-2012 Elections............................................................................ 6
Putin’s September 2011 Announcement of Candidacy for the Presidency ......................... 7
The December 4, 2011, State Duma Election ..................................................................... 8
The March 2012 Presidential Election and Its Aftermath ................................................. 10
Human Rights Problems.......................................................................................................... 14
The Magnitskiy Case......................................................................................................... 14
The Case of Punk Rockers Mariya Alekhina, Yekaterina Samutsevich, and
Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Other Cases.................................................................... 15
Russia’s Presidential Human Rights Commission ............................................................ 15
The U.S.-Russia Working Group on Civil Society............................................................ 16
Insurgency in the North Caucasus..................................................................................... 17
Defense Reforms ..................................................................................................................... 20
U.S. Perspectives............................................................................................................... 22
Trade, Economic, and Energy Issues ............................................................................................. 23
Russia and the Global Economic Crisis .................................................................................. 23
Russia’s Accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO) and PNTR for Russia .............. 24
Modernization Initiatives......................................................................................................... 25
The Skolkovo Center for Innovation................................................................................. 26
U.S. Interest in Skolkovo .................................................................................................. 26
Russian Energy Policy............................................................................................................. 27
Foreign Policy................................................................................................................................ 30
Russia and the West................................................................................................................. 30
NATO-Russia Relations .................................................................................................... 32
Russia and the European Union ........................................................................................ 35
Russia and the Soviet Successor States ................................................................................... 37
U.S.-Russia Relations .................................................................................................................... 40
The Obama Administration “Re-sets” Bilateral Relations ...................................................... 40
Bilateral Relations and Afghanistan ........................................................................................ 45
Bilateral Relations and Iran ..................................................................................................... 48
Russia’s Role in the Middle East Quartet................................................................................ 53
Bilateral Relations and North Korea ....................................................................................... 55
Bilateral Relations and Syria ................................................................................................... 57
Arms Control Issues ................................................................................................................ 59
Cooperative Threat Reduction........................................................................................... 59
The New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty....................................................................... 60
Russia and Missile Defense............................................................................................... 61
U.S.-Russia Economic Ties ..................................................................................................... 73
U.S. Assistance to Russia ........................................................................................................ 75
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Tables
Table 1. U.S. Merchandise Trade with Russia, 1994-2011............................................................ 74
Table 2. U.S. Government Funds Budgeted for Assistance to Russia, FY1992-FY1999.............. 76
Table 3. U.S. Government Funds Budgeted for Assistance to Russia, FY2000-FY2010.............. 77
Table 4. Assistance to Russia, FY2011-FY2012, and the FY2013 Request .................................. 78
Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 78
Acknowledgments ......................................................................................................................... 78
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Most Recent Developments
During a September 8, 2012, meeting between U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Russian
President Putin, and Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov (a meeting that took place on the sidelines
of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, or APEC, summit in Vladivostok) Secretary Clinton
reportedly was informed that Russia was planning to end U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID) programs in the country. A formal diplomatic note was sent to the State
Department on September 12. On September 19, the Russian Foreign Ministry stated that the
work of USAID in Russia “did by no means always meet the stated purposes of contributing to
the development of bilateral humanitarian cooperation. There were attempts to influence, by
means of allocating grants, political processes including elections at different levels and civic
institutions. The activity of USAID in Russian regions, especially in the North Caucasus, raised
serious questions.... It should also be noted that Russia ... rejects the status of recipient of aid from
all international organizations. As for the Russian society, it has become mature enough and does
not need ‘external guidance.’”1
In a press briefing on September 18, State Department Spokesperson Victoria Nuland stated that
USAID had administered about $2.7 billion in assistance to Russia since 1992 and that its
programs in FY2012 amounted to about $51 million. She averred that it was Russia’s sovereign
right to end the programs, but voiced the hope that the United States would be able to continue
some support to Russian non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that support democratization
and human rights. However, she appeared to acknowledge that other U.S. programs might not be
continued after the end of FY2012 when she stated that the United States has “worked over the
years with the Russian Government on programs that fight AIDS there, fight tuberculosis, help
orphans, help the disabled, combat trafficking, support Russian programs in the environmental
area, [such as] wildlife protection. So it is our hope that Russia will now, itself, assume full
responsibility and take forward all of this work.” She also indicated that the planned USAID
funding for Russia ($52 million was requested for FY2013, of which the bulk would have been
administered by USAID) could now be reallocated to other countries with needs.2 Many of these
programs have been part of cooperation efforts discussed by the working groups of the U.S.-
Russia Bilateral Presidential Commission and had been the subject of accords reached at the U.S.-
Russia summit in Los Cabos, Mexico, in June 2012, and at other U.S.-Russia summits.
On September 15, 2012, opposition protests were held in Moscow and dozens of other cities, with
Moscow police reporting a turnout there of about 14,000 (protest organizers reported a higher
turnout). In Moscow, oppositionists Alexey Navalny, Boris Akunin, Mikhail Kasyanov, Gennadiy
Gudkov, Boris Nemtsov, Garri Kasparov, and others called for new elections; political, electoral,
and social reforms; greater media freedom and other human rights; and the release of political
prisoners.
1 “Comment from the Russian Foreign Ministry’s Official Spokesman Aleksandr Lukashevich on the USAID Shutting
Down its Activity in the Russian Federation,” reported in Open Source Center, Central Eurasia: Daily Report,
September 19, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-950104. On September 18, 2012, USAID had issued a fact sheet on its 20 years of
activities in Russia, including support for health, civil society, rule of law, judicial reform, and entrepreneurship.
USAID stated that it had given support for the writing of Russia’s constitution, civil code, tax code, and land code. See
USAID, USAID in Russia, September 18, 2012, at http://www.usaid.gov/news-information/fact-sheets/usaid-russia.
2 U.S. Department of State, Daily Press Briefing, September 18, 2012; Press Statement: On Russian Decision to End
USAID Activities in Russia, September 18, 2012.
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Post-Soviet Russia and Its Significance for the
United States
Although Russia may not be as central to
Russia: Basic Facts
U.S. interests as was the Soviet Union,
Area and Population: Land area is 6.6 million sq. mi.,
cooperation between the two is essential in
about 1.8 times the size of the United States. The population
many areas. Russia remains a nuclear
is 138.1 million (World Factbook, mid-2012 est.).
superpower. It still has a major impact on
Administrative subdivisions include 46 regions, 21 republics,
9 territories, and 7 others.
U.S. national security interests in Europe,
the Middle East, and Asia. Russia has an
Ethnicity: Russian 79.8%; Tatar 3.8%; Ukrainian 2%; Bashkir
important role in the future of arms
1.2%; Chuvash 1.1%; other 12.1% (2002 census).
control, the nonproliferation of weapons of
Gross Domestic Product: $2.4 trillion; per capita GDP is
mass destruction (WMD), and the fight
about $16,700 (World Factbook, 2011 est., purchasing power
parity).
against terrorism.
Political Leaders: President: Vladimir Putin; Prime Minister:
Russia is a potentially important trading
Dmitriy Medvedev; Speaker of the State Duma: Sergey
Naryshkin; Speaker of the Federation Council: Valentina
partner. Russia is the only country in the
Matviyenko; Foreign Minister: Sergey Lavrov; Defense
world with a greater range and scope of
Minister: Anatoliy Serdukov.
natural resources than the United States,
Biography: Putin, born in 1952, received a law degree in
including vast oil and gas reserves. It is the
1975 from Leningrad State University (LSU) and a candidate’s
world’s second-largest producer and
degree in economics in 1997 from the St. Petersburg Mining
exporter of oil (after Saudi Arabia) and the
Institute. In 1975, he joined the Committee for State Security
world’s largest producer and exporter of
(KGB), and was stationed in East Germany from 1985 to
natural gas. It has a large, well-educated
1990. In 1990-1991, he worked at Leningrad State University
and the Leningrad city council. He resigned from the KGB in
labor force and scientific establishment.
1991. From 1991-1996, he worked with St. Petersburg
Also, many of Russia’s needs—food and
Mayor Anatoliy Sobchak, and became first deputy mayor.
food processing, oil and gas extraction
Starting in 1996, he worked in Moscow on property
technology, computers, communications,
management, and then on federal relations, under then-
transportation, and investment capital—are
President Boris Yeltsin. In 1998-1999, he was chief of the
Federal Security Service (a successor agency of the KGB). In
in areas in which the United States is
August 1999, he was confirmed as prime minister, and
highly competitive, although bilateral trade
became acting president on December 31, 1999. He won
remains relatively low.
election as president in 2000 and was reelected in 2004.
From 2008-2012, he was prime minister, and was reelected
president in 2012.
Political and Human Rights Developments
Background
Russia is a multi-ethnic state with over 100 nationalities and a complex federal structure inherited
from the Soviet period that includes regions, republics, territories, and other subunits. During
Boris Yeltsin’s presidency, many of the republics and regions won greater autonomy. Only the
Chechen Republic, however, tried to assert complete independence. During his presidency,
Vladimir Putin reversed this trend and rebuilt the strength of the central government vis-à-vis the
regions. In coming decades, the percentage of ethnic Russians is expected to decline because of
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relatively greater birthrates among non-Russian groups and in-migration by non-Russians. In
many of Russia’s ethnic-based republics and autonomous regions, ethnic Russians are becoming a
declining share of the population, resulting in the titular nationalities becoming the majority
populations. Implications may include changes in domestic and foreign policies under the
influence of previously marginalized ethnic groups and federal devolution. Alternatively, an
authoritarian Russian central government that carries out chauvinist policies could contribute to
rising ethnic conflict and even separatism.
The Russian Constitution combines elements of the U.S., French, and German systems, but with
an even stronger presidency. Among its more distinctive features are the ease with which the
president can dissolve the legislature and call for new elections and the obstacles preventing the
legislature from dismissing the government in a vote of no confidence. The president, with the
legislature’s approval, appoints a prime minister who heads the government. The president and
prime minister appoint government ministers and other officials. The prime minister and
government are accountable to the president rather than the legislature. In November 2008,
constitutional amendments extended the presidential term to six years and the term of State Duma
(lower legislative chamber) deputies from four to five years, and these provisions came into force
with the most recent Duma election in December 2011 and the most recent presidential election in
March 2012.
The bicameral legislature is called the Federal Assembly. The State Duma, the more powerful
chamber, has 450 seats. In May 2005, a law was passed that all 450 Duma seats would be filled
by party list elections, with a 7% threshold for party representation. The upper chamber, the
Federation Council, has 166 seats, two from each of the current 83 regions and republics of the
Russian Federation. Deputies are appointed by the regional chief executive and the regional
legislature.
The judiciary is the least developed of the three branches. Some of the Soviet-era structure and
practices are still in place. Criminal code reform was completed in 2001. Trial by jury was
planned to expand to cover most cases, but instead has been restricted following instances where
state prosecutors lost high-profile cases. The Supreme Court is the highest appellate body. The
Constitutional Court rules on the legality and constitutionality of governmental acts and on
disputes between branches of government or federative entities. Federal judges, who serve
lifetime terms, are appointed by the president and must be approved by the Federation Council.
The courts are widely perceived to be subject to political manipulation and control.
Putin’s First Two Presidential Terms:
The Tightening of Presidential Power
Former President Boris Yeltsin’s surprise resignation in December 1999 was a gambit to permit
then-Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to become acting president, in line with the constitution, and
to situate him for election as president in March 2000. Putin’s electoral prospects were enhanced
by his depiction in state-owned television and other mass media as a youthful, sober, and plain-
talking leader; and by his decisive launch of military action against the breakaway Chechnya
region (see his biography above, Russia: Basic Facts).
Putin’s priorities as president were strengthening the central government and restoring Russia’s
status as a great power. His government took nearly total control of nation-wide broadcast media,
shutting down or effectively nationalizing independent television and radio stations. In 2006, the
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Russian government forced most Russian radio stations to stop broadcasting programs prepared
by the U.S.-funded Voice of America and Radio Liberty. Journalists critical of the government
have been imprisoned, attacked, and in some cases killed with impunity.
A defining political and economic event of the Putin era was the October 2003 arrest of Mikhail
Khodorkovskiy, the head of Yukos, then the world’s fourth-largest oil company. Khodorkovskiy’s
arrest was triggered by his criticism of some of Putin’s actions, his financing of anti-Putin
political parties, and his hints that he might enter politics in the future. Khodorkovskiy’s arrest
was seen by many as politically motivated, aimed at eliminating a political enemy and making an
example of him to other Russian businessmen. In May 2005, Khodorkovskiy was found guilty on
multiple criminal charges of tax evasion and fraud and sentenced to eight years in prison. Yukos
was broken up and its principal assets sold off to satisfy alleged tax debts. Since then, the
government has renationalized or otherwise brought under its control a number of other large
enterprises that it views as “strategic assets.” These include ship, aircraft, and auto
manufacturing, as well as other raw material extraction activities. At the same time, the Kremlin
installed senior officials to head these enterprises. This phenomenon of political elites taking the
helm of many of Russia’s leading economic enterprises led some observers to conclude that
“those who rule Russia, own Russia,” In December 2010, Khodorkovskiy was found guilty in a
new trial on charges of embezzlement, theft, and money-laundering and sentenced to several
additional years in prison. In February 2011, an aide to the trial judge alleged that the conviction
was a case of “telephone justice,” where the verdict had been dictated to the court by higher
authorities. In late May 2011, the Russian Supreme Court upheld the sentence on appeal.3
Another pivotal event was the September 2004 terrorist attack on a primary school in the town of
Beslan, North Ossetia, that resulted in hundreds of civilian casualties. President Putin seized the
opportunity provided by the crisis to launch a number of political changes he claimed were
essential to quash terrorism. In actuality, the changes marked the consolidation of his centralized
control over the political system and the vitiation of fragile democratic reforms of the 1980s and
1990s, according to many observers. The changes included abolishing the popular election of
regional governors (replacing such elections with the appointment of presidential nominees that
are confirmed by regional legislatures) and mandating that all Duma Deputies be elected on the
basis of national party lists. The first measure made regional governors wholly dependent on, and
subservient to, the president. The second measure eliminated independent deputies, further
strengthening the pro-presidential parties that already held a majority of Duma seats. In early
2006, President Putin signed a new law regulating non-government organizations (NGOs), which
Kremlin critics charged has given the government leverage to shut down NGOs that it views as
politically troublesome.
The Kremlin decided to make the December 2007 State Duma election a display of Putin’s
popularity. Putin’s October 2007 announcement that he would run for a Duma seat at the head of
3 S.Res. 189, introduced by Senator Roger Wicker on June 18, 2009, and a similar bill, H.Res. 588, introduced by
Representative James McGovern on June 26, 2009, expressed the sense of the chamber that the prosecution of
Khodorkovskiy was politically motivated, called for the new charges against him to be dropped, and urged that he be
paroled as a sign that Russia was moving toward upholding democratic principles and human rights. S.Res. 65,
introduced by Senator Wicker on February 17, 2011, expressed the sense of the Senate that the conviction of
Khodorkovskiy and Lebedev constituted a politically motivated case of selective arrest and prosecution and that it
should be overturned. For Congressional comments after Khodorkovskiy received a second sentence, see Senator
Wicker, Congressional Record, January 5, 2011, p. S54; Representative David Dreier, Congressional Record, January
19, 2011, p. H329.
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the United Russia ticket made the outcome doubly sure (under the constitution, however, a sitting
president is barred from also sitting in the Duma). Russian authorities effectively prevented the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) from sending election observers by
delaying the issuance of visas until the last minute. United Russia won 64.3% of the popular vote
and 315 of the 450 seats—more than the two-thirds majority required to amend the constitution.4
The 2008-2012 Medvedev-Putin “Tandem”
Almost immediately after the December 2007 Duma election, Putin announced that his protégé
Dmitriy Medvedev was his choice for president. Medvedev announced that, if elected, he would
ask Putin to serve as prime minister. This arrangement was meant to ensure political continuity
for Putin and those around him. The Putin regime manipulated election laws and regulations to
block “inconvenient” candidates from running in the March 2008 presidential election, according
to many observers. Medvedev garnered 70% of the vote against three candidates. As with the
Duma election, the OSCE refused to submit to restrictions demanded by Moscow and did not
send electoral observers.5
Many observers had hoped that President Medvedev would be more democratic than former
President Putin. Despite some seemingly liberal statements and decisions by President Medvedev,
the main trend was a continuation of the political system honed by Putin, according to most
observers.6 In late 2008, President Medvedev proposed a number of political changes that were
subsequently enacted or otherwise put into place. Observers regarded a few of the changes as
progressive and most of the others as regressive. These included constitutional changes extending
the presidential term to six years and State Duma deputies’ terms to five years (as mentioned
above), requiring annual government reports to the State Duma, permitting regional authorities to
dismiss mayors, reducing the number of signatures for a party to participate in elections, reducing
the number of members necessary in order for parties to register, abolishing the payment of a
bond in lieu of signatures for participation in elections, and giving small political parties more
rights (see below).
Seen by some observers as a possible sign of democratization, in February 2009 Medvedev
revived a moribund “Presidential Council to Promote the Development of Civil Society
Institutions and Human Rights” (hereinafter referred to as the Presidential Human Rights
Commission). Some liberal advocates joined because Medvedev appeared more progressive than
his predecessor, Putin. Medvedev met with the Council in April 2009, at which criticism of the
human rights situation in Russia included that NGOs were being harmed by the 2006 NGO law.
Some amendments proposed by the Council were signed into law in July 2009. Changes included
easing some reporting requirements and limiting the ability of bureaucrats to inspect NGO
facilities. Restrictions on foreign-based NGOs were only slightly eased, however. Some critics
viewed the approved amendments as mainly cosmetic.7 In a move that seemed regressive,
President Medvedev called in August 2009 for further limiting jury trials (he had signed a law at
4 See CRS Report RS22770, Russia’s December 2007 Legislative Election: Outcome and Implications, by Jim Nichol.
5 RFE/RL, Newsline, February 5, 20, 2008.
6 Analyst Gordon Hahn argues that even though President Medvedev’s overall reform record is disappointing, some
changes in the criminal code have been progressive. See “Assessing Medvedev’s Presidential Legacy,” Other Points of
View, November 3, 2011, at http://russiaotherpointsofview.com.
7 Michael Allen, “Obama Trip Prompts Token NGO Reform, but Kremlin Incapable of Real Change,” Democracy
Digest, July 6, 2009.
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the end of 2008 limiting jury trials in terrorist or extremist cases) that involve “criminal
communities,” which some legal experts and civil rights advocates criticized as an effort to
further squelch unwanted acquittals by juries. At the end of 2010, Prime Minister Putin claimed
that clan interests also tainted jury decisions. In February 2011, however, President Medvedev
stated that although jurors had many flaws, jury trials should not be abolished.8
In June 2010, the Presidential Human Rights Commission sent a legal analysis to President
Medvedev in opposition to a bill that criminalized disobeying an employee of the Federal
Security Service (FSB) or hindering him in the performance of official duties. The bill also
permitted the FSB to issue warnings to individuals or groups whose actions it felt might
jeopardize national security, even if the actions were not crimes. The Council warned that “this
kind of return to the worst and unlawful practices of a totalitarian state … cannot be perceived by
society as anything other that legitimizing the suppression of civil liberties and dissent.”9 Despite
this criticism, the FSB bill was approved with minor changes and signed into law.
President Medvedev signed legislation in October 2011 to reduce the voting hurdle for party
representation in the State Duma elected in 2016 from 7% to 5% (Putin had raised the limit from
5% to 7% in 2004). As with a similar move by President Nursultan Nazarbayev in Kazakhstan,
the flip-flop in the percentage was proclaimed to mark advancing democratization.
Government Moves Against Non-Favored Political Parties and Leaders in the
Period Before the 2011-2012 Elections
In February 2011, the then-head of the Just Russia Party and speaker of the Federation Council,
Sergey Mironov, stated that his party had decided not to endorse any presidential candidate
nominated by United Russia and instead might nominate its own candidate. Putin—then the
chairman of United Russia, although not a formal member—appeared to question one of
Mironov’s remarks as extremist during a meeting in early April 2011, perhaps marking a loss of
confidence by Putin in Mironov’s leadership.10 Within days of this meeting, Mironov announced
that he was stepping down as chairman of Just Russia. According to one interpretation, Mironov
stepped down as chairman as a means to quell growing criticism by United Russia and others that
an increasingly vocal political oppositionist should not also be the head of the Federation Council
(senators in the Federation Council, the majority of which are United Russia Party members,
elected him as chairman; however, senators are supposed to be nonpartisan in the performance of
their duties). United Russia, however, had decided to seek Mironov’s ouster as head of the
Federation Council, and its members in the St. Petersburg legislature led an overwhelmingly
successful May 18 recall vote. Some critics argued that the Kremlin, which had created Just
Russia in 2006 as a harmless foil to United Russia, had become incensed that Just Russia was
becoming a real opposition party by fits and starts and was gaining in popularity.11 Mironov
subsequently filled a seat in the Duma vacated by a fellow Just Party deputy on his behalf. St.
8 CEDR, February 14, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-46015. In May 2011, Supreme Court Chairman Vyacheslav Lebedev
elucidated that such flaws included the weakness of jurors to lawyers who were “charming” debaters. CEDR, May 27,
2011, Doc. No. CEP-9017.
9 CEDR, June 22, 2010, Doc. No CEP-4005; June 24, 2010, Doc. No. CEP-950171.
10 RIA-Novosti, the government press agency, quoted unnamed Kremlin officials as terming Mironov’s proposal that
the assets of officials suspected of corruption be confiscated as “strange,” “populist,” and “unconstitutional.” CEDR,
April 3, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-950042.
11 CEDR, May 23, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-6025.
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Petersburg Mayor Valentina Matviyenko—who helped orchestrate Mironov’s ouster from the
Federation Council—subsequently became its new head.
At a meeting of United Russia on May 6, 2011, Prime Minister Putin called for the creation of a
“broad popular front [of] like-minded political forces,” to participate in the Duma election,
including United Russia and other political parties, business associations, trade unions, and youth,
women’s and veterans’ organizations. Non-party candidates nominated by these various
organizations would be included on United Russia’s party list, he stated. Following Putin’s
speech, a headquarters and regional branches, leadership, and a website were quickly set up.
Then-deputy prime minister and chief of government staff Vyacheslav Volodin was named the
head of the popular front headquarters. Critics objected that it was illegal for government
resources and officials to be involved in political party activities. They also claimed that the idea
of the “popular front” was reminiscent of the one in place in the German Democratic Republic
when Putin served there in the Soviet-era KGB.
A prospective pro-democracy party, the People’s Freedom Party (also known by its Russian
initials, PARNAS)—co-headed by former Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov and liberal activists
Vladimir Ryzhkov and Boris Nemtsov—submitted signatures in late May 2011 to gain
registration, but was turned down on the grounds that many of the signatures were invalid.
According to some reports, authorities had pressured some individuals to repudiate their
signatures. The U.S. State Department criticized the refusal to register the party as a setback for
democratization in Russia.
Another party, Right Cause, had been set up with reported Kremlin support in early 2009 as a
pro-government liberal party. In May 2011, the Kremlin allegedly picked Russian businessman
Mikhail Prokhorov to head Right Cause, but he began to criticize the Kremlin’s control over the
party, and according to his account, was forced to step down in mid-September 2011. Among his
allegations, he claimed that then-Russian presidential administration official Vladislav Surkov
was dictating who the party could field as candidates in the upcoming Duma election and
otherwise attempting to maintain control over the “puppet” party.12 Prokhorov later ran in the
presidential election, amid controversy that he had been put forward by the Kremlin to serve as a
progressive candidate.
Putin’s September 2011 Announcement of Candidacy for the Presidency
On September 24, 2011, at the annual convention of the ruling United Russia Party, Prime
Minister Putin announced that he would run in the March 2012 presidential election. President
Medvedev in turn announced that he would not run for reelection, and endorsed Putin’s
candidacy. Putin stated that he intended to nominate Medvedev as his prime minister, if elected.
The two leaders claimed that they had agreed in late 2007, when they decided that Medvedev
would assume the presidency, that Putin could decide to reassume it in 2012. Until these
announcements, the United Russia Party had left the leading slot open on its proposed party list of
candidates for the planned December 2011 State Duma election. Putin suggested that Medvedev
head the party list. All these announcements were acclaimed by the assembled delegates. In his
speech to the delegates, Putin warned that global economic problems posed a severe test for
Russia, implying that Russia needed his leadership to solve these problems. In his speech,
Medvedev pledged that he would continue to modernize the political system, the judiciary, and
12 Open Source Center, Central Eurasia: Daily Report, September 16, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-9001.
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the economy; would combat corruption; and would strengthen the military. The official news
service hailed the continuation of the “effective” and “successful” Putin-Medvedev “tandem” as
the best assurance of Russia’s future modernization, stability, and “dignity.”13
Just after the party convention, Medvedev fired Russian Finance Minister and Deputy Prime
Minister Alexey Kudrin after Kudrin stated that he would not serve under Medvedev as prime
minister (according to some reports, Kudrin may have expected to be named prime minister in a
future government). A United Russia Party convention to formally nominate Putin as its candidate
was held in late November 2011. Russian analyst Pavel Baev has stated that the legitimacy of
Putin’s return to the presidency “is seriously compromised because the spirit, if not the letter, of
the constitution is clearly violated” (at issue is one word in the constitution, which specifies that
presidents are limited to two successive terms in office).14 Some critics have warned that Putin
might well feel free to fill out another two terms as president until the year 2024, making his term
in office longer than that of former General Secretary of the Soviet Communist Party Leonid
Brezhnev, who served for 18 years and who was remembered for his senility and the “era of
stagnation” during the last part of his rule.
The December 4, 2011, State Duma Election
In the run-up to the December 2011 State Duma election, seven political parties were approved to
run, although during the period since the last election in late 2007, several other parties had
attempted to register for the election but were blocked from doing so. These actions had elicited
criticism from the U.S. State Department that diverse political interests were not being fully
represented. As election day neared, Russian officials became increasingly concerned that the
ruling United Russia Party, which had held most of the seats in the outgoing Duma, was swiftly
losing popular support. According to some observers, Russian authorities, in an attempt to prevent
losses at the polls, not only used their positions to campaign for the party but also planned ballot-
box stuffing and other illicit means to retain a majority of seats for the ruling party. In addition,
Russia’s then-President Dmitriy Medvedev and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin had increasingly
criticized election monitoring carried out by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE), and insisted on limiting the number of OSCE observers. Russian authorities also
moved against one prominent Russian non-governmental monitoring group, Golos, to discourage
its coverage of the election.
According to the OSCE’s final report on the outcome of the election, the close ties between the
Russian government and the ruling party, the refusal to register political parties, the pro-
government bias of the electoral commissions and most media, and ballot-box stuffing and other
government manipulation of the vote marked the election as not free and fair. OSCE observers
reported that vote counting was assessed as bad or very bad in terms of transparency and other
violations in one-third of polling stations they visited and in up to one-quarter of territorial
electoral commissions.15 Golos has estimated that just by padding the voting rolls, electoral
officials delivered 15 million extra votes to United Russia, nearly one-half of its vote total (by
this assessment, United Russia only received some 25% of the vote, even after authorities used
13 ITAR-TASS, September 25, 2011.
14 Eurasia Daily Monitor, October 3, 2011.
15 OSCE, Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), Russian Federation Elections to the State
Duma, 4 December 2011, OSCE/ODIHR Election Observation Mission: Final Report, January 12, 2012.
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various means to persuade or coerce individuals to vote for the party).16 On December 23, 2011,
the Presidential Human Rights Council called for the head of the CEC to resign because he had
lost “the people’s trust,” and for new electoral laws to be drawn up in preparation for an early
legislative election.17
Protests After the State Duma Election
On December 4-5, rallies were held in Moscow and St. Petersburg to protest against what was
viewed as a flawed election, leading to hundreds of detentions by police. On December 5, about
5,000 protesters or more held an authorized rally in central Moscow. When many of the protesters
began an unsanctioned march toward the Central Electoral Commission, police forcibly dispersed
them and detained hundreds. The Kremlin also mobilized pro-government youth groups to hold
large demonstrations termed “clean victory” to press home their claim that minority groups would
not be permitted to impose their will on the “majority” of the electorate. On December 7, 2011,
several U.S. Senators issued a statement condemning Russian police crackdowns on those
demonstrating against the “blatant fraud” of the Duma election.
On December 10, large demonstrations under the slogan “For Fair Elections” (a movement with
this name was formed by various political groups) were held in Moscow and dozens of other
cities. At the Moscow rally, deemed by some observers as the largest in many years, Boris
Nemtsov, the co-head of the unregistered opposition Party of People’s Freedom, presented a list
of demands that included the ouster of the head of the Central Electoral Commission, the release
of those detained for protesting and other “political prisoners,” the registration of previously
banned parties, and new Duma elections. Some protesters shouted “Russia without Putin.” Local
authorities had approved the demonstration and police displayed restraint. Another large
demonstration sponsored by the “For Fair Elections” group occurred in Moscow on December 24,
2011.
On February 4, 2012, the “For Fair Elections” group sponsored peaceful protests in Moscow and
other cities. Turnout in Moscow was estimated at 38,000 by police but up to 160,000 by the
organizers. The protesters called for disqualified liberal candidate Grigoriy Yavlinskiy (who
attended) to be permitted to run in the presidential election, the release of “political prisoners”
Khodorkovskiy and others, and legal reforms leading to new legislative and presidential elections.
In Moscow, a counter-demonstration termed “Anti-Orange Protest” (referring to demonstrations
in Ukraine in late 2004 that led to a democratic election) was organized by pro-Kremlin parties
and groups, including the Patriots of Russia Party and Deputy Prime Minister Dmitriy Rogozin’s
ultranationalist Congress of Russian Communities group. Moscow police claimed that 138,000-
150,000 individuals joined this protest. Prime Minister Putin praised the turnout for the counter-
demonstration. The counter-protesters reportedly accused the “For Fair Election” demonstrators
as wishing for the destruction of Russia and alleged that the United States was fomenting “regime
change” in Russia. Just before the “Anti-Orange Protest,” state television aired a “documentary”
about how the United States allegedly had conspired in the late 1980s and 1990s to take over
Russia’s resources.
16 Golos, Domestic Monitoring of Elections to the 6th State Duma of the Federal Assembly, Russian Federation, 4
December 2011: Final Report, January 27, 2012.
17 CEDR, December 23, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-950175.
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According to one Russian analyst, although the authorities initially were alarmed by the
December opposition protests, they soon devised countermeasures, including the rallying of state
workers and patriots to hold staged counter-demonstrations.18
Many observers have argued that proposals for democratic reforms made in December in
response to the protests were subsequently watered down, although some progressive measures
were enacted. Among the changes:
• Amendments to the law on political parties were signed into law on April 3,
2012, permitting the registration of new parties after they submit 500 signatures
from members. However, the retention of strict reporting requirements on party
activities and finances and the ban on electoral blocs were viewed by some
observers as less progressive, the latter because it would prevent small parties
from cooperating in elections.19
• A law signed on May 2, 2012, eliminated the need for political parties not
represented in the Duma to gather signatures in order to participate in Duma
elections. The law also reduced the number of signatures required for these
parties to field presidential candidates and the number required for self-
nominated candidates. These changes were viewed by many observers as
progressive.
• A law reestablishing gubernatorial elections was signed into law on May 2, 2012.
It provides for local officials to approve candidates, for a presidential option to
nominate candidates, and for a president to remove governors, a hybrid direct and
indirect electoral procedure. At the same time, the law places new conditions on
the election of mayors of regional capitals. The provisions on gubernatorial
elections are considered only semi-progressive by many observers.
• A proposal to set up public television appeared vitiated by creating it by
presidential edict (which can be repealed at any time), and by making its head a
presidential appointee.20
The March 2012 Presidential Election and Its Aftermath
Five candidates were able to register for the March 4, 2012, presidential election. Besides Putin,
three of the other four candidates—Communist Party head Gennadiy Zyuganov, Liberal
Democratic Party head Vladimir Zhirinovskiy, and A Just Russia Party head Sergey Mironov—
were nominated by parties with seats in the Duma. The remaining candidate, businessman
Mikhail Prokhorov, was self-nominated and was required to gather 2 million signatures to
register. Other prospective candidates dropped out or were disqualified on technical grounds by
the Central Electoral Commission (CEC). Opposition Yabloko Party head Grigoriy Yavlinskiy
was disqualified by the CEC on the grounds that over 5% of the signatures he gathered were
invalid. Many critics argued that he was eliminated because he would have been the only bona
18 CEDR, May 7, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-6001.
19 European Commission For Democracy Through Law (Venice Commission), Opinion on the Law on Political Parties
of the Russian Federation, Opinion No. 658/2011, CDL-AD(2012)003, March 20, 2012.
20 CEDR, April 27, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-49013.
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fide opposition candidate on the ballot. Of the registered candidates running against Putin, all but
Prokhorov had run in previous presidential elections and lost badly.
According to the final report of the CEC, Putin won 63.6% of 71.8 million votes cast, somewhat
less than the 71.3% he had received in his last presidential election in 2004. In their final report,
monitors led by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) concluded that
the election was well organized but that there were several problems. Although the report did not
state outright that the election was “not free and fair,” some of the monitors at a press conference
stated that they had not viewed it as free and fair. According to the report, Prime Minister Putin
received an advantage in media coverage, and authorities mobilized local officials and resources
to garner support for Putin. The OSCE monitors witnessed irregularities in vote-counting in
nearly one-third of the 98 polling stations visited and in about 15% of 72 higher-level territorial
electoral commissions.21
The initial protests after Putin’s election by those who view the electoral process as tainted
appeared smaller in size and number than after the Duma election. Authorities approved a protest
rally in Pushkin Square in central Moscow on March 5, along with Putin victory rallies elsewhere
in the city. After some of the protesters allegedly did not disperse after the time for the rally had
elapsed, police forcibly intervened and reportedly detained up to 250 demonstrators, including
activist Alexey Navalny, who later was released.
Opposition politicians Alexey Navalny, Boris Nemtsov, and Sergey Udaltsov were among the
organizers of an approved demonstration on May 6 in Moscow. Turnout was approved for 5,000
participants, but police reported that about 8,000 turned out. Other observers estimated that over
20,000 turned out. Allegedly, regional authorities had been ordered to prevent dissidents from
traveling to Moscow, and warnings appeared that military enlistment offices would issue
conscription summonses to young male protesters. A televised pro-Putin rally was held elsewhere
in Moscow that provided a contrasting image to the anti-Putin rally. When anti-Putin
demonstrators attempted to march to the Kremlin, police pushed them back, triggering large-scale
violence. Hundreds were detained, among them Navalny, Nemtsov, and Udaltsov. Protesters
continued to be arrested at the end of the month on accusations of using or abetting violence
against the police on May 6.
Apparently because of the violent demonstration on May 6, the next day police and security
personnel encircled a large swath of the downtown and cleared it of humans and cars along the
route that Putin’s motorcade would take from his former prime ministerial office to his
presidential office in the Kremlin. Because of this, the public was forced to view the inauguration
solely via television, watching as the motorcade traversed a surreal, “after humans” Moscow.
As an apparent slap in the face to protests against perceived electoral irregularities, CEC Chief
Vladimir Churov was retained as chief after the elections, and outgoing President Medvedev even
gave him one of the highest state awards for his service.
Putin issued a number of decrees immediately after taking the oath of office, which he explained
were aimed at implementing his campaign pledges. Among them, he decreed that birth rates
21 OSCE, ODIHR, Russian Federation, Presidential Election, 4 March 2012, OSCE/ODIHR Election Observation
Mission: Final Report, May 11, 2012.
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would increase and death rates would decrease by 2018, that a new foreign policy strategy
document be formulated, and that defense spending be increased.
Opposition protests continued in Moscow after Putin’s inauguration, with many detentions,
sometimes of those merely walking around Moscow or dining in restaurants with white ribbons
attached to their clothing, a symbol of the anti-Putin protests. Navalny and Udaltsov were
sentenced on May 9 to 15 days in jail for failing to obey police orders. An opposition camp was
established on May 8 in Moscow’s Chistiye Prudiy park, but was broken up by police on May 15,
reportedly on orders from the presidential administration.22
On May 10, 2012, the Russian Republican Party—which had been liquidated by order of the
Supreme Court in 2007—received notice from the Justice Ministry that its legal registration had
been restored. Party chairman Vladimir Ryzhkov, who also is a co-chair of PARNAS, hailed the
restoration and stated that a party congress would be planned for June to approve a new charter
and program and elect the leadership. In January 2012, the Supreme Court had reversed its
judgment against the party’s registration after the European Court of Human Rights had ruled that
the judgment was invalid. The restored registration of the party was viewed by observers as
providing the opposition with added legal means of political participation.
The government cabinet was announced on May 21, 2012. In all, 20 of 28 ministers and agency
heads were replaced. According to analyst Anders Åslund, several of the former KGB operatives
and notoriously corrupt and inefficient ministers were replaced, possibly opening the way to some
economic reforms, although he cautioned that Putin and his associates still controlled the state-
owned corporations and would resist privatization and anti-corruption reforms.23 Other observers
argued that several of these ex-agency heads have been retained as presidential advisors, and
raised concerns that a Putin presidency would maintain control over the cabinet and that few if
any reforms would be undertaken. Some of these observers even predicted that Medvedev and his
cabinet might be ousted within a year or two by the more conservative Putin and his associates.24
After his election, Putin stepped down as the leader of the United Russia Party, claiming that the
president should be nonpartisan (raising the question of why then-President Medvedev headed the
party’s Duma list of candidates in late 2011). At a United Russia Party congress in late May 2012,
Putin recommended Medvedev for the chairmanship, stating that in other democracies, the head
of government oversees the ruling party’s legislative efforts. Medvedev was elected party
chairman by acclamation, a process that appeared reminiscent of Soviet-era communist party
congresses.
Several laws were passed in the summer of 2012 that appeared to at least partly negate initiatives
carried out during Medvedev’s presidency that were viewed as supporting democratization and
human rights to some degree.
• A bill was signed into law in June 2012 that increased the fine for individuals
convicted for “violating the public order” to over $9,000 and for organizers of
unapproved demonstrations to $30,500. When asked by reporters about the bill,
22 CEDR, May 23, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-9015.
23 The Moscow Times, May 29, 2012.
24 CEDR, May 23, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-950037; Catherine Belton and Charles Clover, “Putin’s People,” Financial
Times, May 30, 2012.
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Fedotov stated that he would urge new President Putin to veto it. Putin upbraided
Fedotov for not first bringing him concerns about the bill, but Putin subsequently
reaffirmed Fedotov as a presidential advisor and as head of the Human Rights
Commission. Most observers viewed the law as a further threat to freedom of
assembly in Russia.
• A bill was signed into law in July 2012 requiring NGOs that receive foreign
grants to register as “foreign agents.” Some NGOs have refused to register under
the new law, and may face closure, including the For Human Rights NGO,
headed by Lev Ponomaryev, and the Moscow Helsinki Group, headed by
Lyudmila Alekseyeva. Both groups reported that they had received letters at their
request from the State Department that denied that the U.S. government played
any role in the day to day affairs of the NGOs.
• a bill was signed into law in late July 2012 that partly restored a law changed last
year that had de-criminalized defamation. Under the new law, a civil penalty of
up to $155,000 may be levied. The old law, which classified defamation as a
felony, had led to hundreds of convictions each year. Critics viewed the new law
as reinstituting means to suppress media reporting on or citizens’ complaints
about official malfeasance. In late August 2012, media reported that a United
Russia Duma deputy stated that the legislature was considering amending the
new law to criminalize Internet postings, including those defaming the United
Russia Party as “the Party of crooks and thieves.”25
In addition to these laws, President Putin submitted draft legislation to the Duma in late June
2012 to change the procedure for filling seats in the Federation Council.26 He called for regional
voters to have a role in “democratically” electing one of the two members of the Federation
Council (often termed senators), proposing that a candidate running in a gubernatorial election
select three possible senators from among sitting local legislators, who would appear on the ballot
with him. After winning, the governor would designate one of the candidates as the regional
senator. Critics charged that the process was at best an indirect means of choosing senators.
Opposition groups are nominating candidates for a planned inter-party election in October 2012
to form a “coordinating council” to jointly press for political change. The organizers have
envisaged that leftist (such as the Communist Party), liberal, and nationalist parties and groups
will participate, but the Communist Party and others have stated that they will not take part in the
election.
Several regional and local elections are scheduled for October 2012. Of particular significance are
the first gubernatorial elections since they were banned in 2004. Twenty-two candidates are
running against the five sitting governors seeking reelection. The “filter” requirement that
prospective candidates collect signatures from at least 10% of local deputies strongly favored
those prospective candidates from the ruling United Russia Party, and restricted the possibilities
of prospective candidates from minor parties.
25 CEDR, August 29, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-950042.
26 Under current practice, where each region or republic has two senators, one senator is selected by the governor (and
confirmed by the regional/republic legislature), and the other is selected by the regional/republic legislature.
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The Popular Front, headed by Putin, plans to hold a congress in late 2012. One observer has
argued that since the United Russia Party, headed by Medvedev, is merely a part of the Popular
Front, the United Russia Party is not the ruling party. Under one scenario, the Popular Front may
be put forward as the successor to the increasingly unpopular United Russia Party.27
Human Rights Problems
The Magnitskiy Case
The death of Sergey Magnitskiy—a lawyer for the Hermitage Fund, a private investment firm—
in November 2009 after being detained for 11 months has been a highly visible example of the
failure of the rule of law in Russia, according to many observers. He had been detained on tax
evasion charges after he alleged that police and other officials had illicitly raided Hermitage
assets. In July 2011, a group of human rights advisors to the president issued a report providing
evidence that Magnitskiy’s arrest was unlawful, that he had been beaten and possibly tortured
while in detention (including just before his death), and that prison officials and possibly higher-
level officials had ordered doctors not to treat him. The Russian Prosecutor-General’s Office and
Interior Ministry rejected the findings. Medvedev ordered an official investigation into
Magnitskiy’s death, and in September 2011 these investigators narrowly concluded that his death
was due to the negligence of two prison doctors. In late November 2011, Hermitage Capital
released a report giving details of how government officials allegedly ordered that Magnitskiy be
beaten and blocked medical treatment, resulting in his death. On December 8, 2011, the Russian
Interior Ministry rejected the conclusions of the Hermitage Capital report, and reasserted that
Magnitskiy had died of a heart attack rather than trauma. A prison doctor and the deputy head of
the prison were charged in mid-2011, but the case against the doctor was dropped in April 2012
on the grounds that the time limit for filing charges had expired.
In August 2011, the Constitutional Court upheld the resumption of criminal proceedings against
the dead man, ostensibly on the grounds that Russian law allows for such a case to proceed at the
request of the family, to possibly result in a confirmation of innocence (or, in effect, guilt). The
family has denied that it formally requested the resumption of the trial. In February 2012, the
Moscow Helsinki Committee, a human rights NGO, condemned the ongoing trial of a dead man
and persecution of the family as “a new alarming symptom of complete degradation of Russian
justice.”28 In July 2012, several Russian senators (members of the Federation Council) visited
Washington, D.C., and met with Members of Congress and others. The senators claimed that the
Federation Council had carried out an investigation of the Magnitskiy case, and they presented
the findings, which upheld Magnitskiy’s guilt. However, no such investigation actually had taken
place and their “findings” had been provided by the Interior Ministry. On September 6, 2012,
President Putin stated that Magnitskiy’s death was a “tragedy,” that investigators were looking
into the case, and that if “culprits” responsible for the death are found, they will be punished.29
In the 112th Congress, H.R. 4405 (McGovern), introduced on April 19, 2012; S. 1039 (Cardin),
introduced on May 19, 2011; and S. 3406 (Baucus), introduced on July 19, 2012, impose visa and
financial sanctions on persons responsible for the detention, abuse, or death of Sergei Magnitskiy,
27 CEDR, August 31, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-9003.
28 CEDR, February 29, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-950048.
29 Interfax, September 6, 2012.
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or for the conspiracy to defraud the Russian Federation of taxes on corporate profits through
fraudulent transactions and lawsuits against Hermitage. In addition, the bills impose sanctions on
persons responsible for other gross violations of human rights. H.R. 4405 was ordered to be
reported by the Foreign Affairs Committee on June 7, 2012. S. 1039 was ordered to be reported
by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, as amended, on July 23, 2012. S. 3406 was ordered
to be reported by the Senate Finance Committee on July 19, 2012. Sections 304-307 of S. 3406
contain language similar to S. 1039, as reported, along with language authorizing the extension of
nondiscriminatory treatment (normal trade relations treatment) to Russia and Moldova (see
below, “Russia’s Accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO) and PNTR for Russia”).
During debate over early versions of the bills, the State Department announced that some
unnamed Russian individuals they deemed responsible for Magnitskiy’s detention and death
would—under existing law—be subject to visa restrictions. In support of the bills, a Russian
human rights group issued an expansive list of over 300 individuals it deemed had violated
Magnitskiy’s rights or those of other human rights activists. This latter list incensed some Russian
officials who appeared to believe that it had become part of the State Department action. In late
October 2011, Foreign Minister Lavrov stated that some U.S. citizens had been placed on a
Russian visa ban list. Other ministry officials and media reported that the listed U.S. citizens had
been involved in incidents linked to the Guantanamo Bay, Bagram, and Abu Ghraib detention and
prison facilities. In addition, U.S. citizens involved in prosecuting Russian organized crime
figures allegedly were listed. In early September 2012, the chairman of the Federation Council’s
Legal Committee stated that the body might consider legislation imposing sanctions on
individuals who infringed on the rights of Russians to travel abroad, which seemingly could
target Members of Congress involved with the Magnitskiy legislation.
The Case of Punk Rockers Mariya Alekhina, Yekaterina Samutsevich, and
Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Other Cases
On August 17, 2012, a Russian court sentenced Punk Rockers Mariya Alekhina, Yekaterina
Samutsevich, and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova (members of the “Pussy Riot” singing group) to two
years in prison on charges of hooliganism motivated by religious hatred and feminist extremism.
The group briefly had sung anti-Putin songs in the Church of Christ the Savior in Moscow in
February 2012. Many in the international community and in Russia had called for the charges
against the singers to be reduced to a misdemeanor or dropped. Russian state media appeared to
present the trial as juxtaposing the beliefs and attitudes of a majority of Russians against those of
a minority of immoral political oppositionists.
On August 18, 2012, a Russian court sentenced opposition activist Taisiya Osipova to eight years
in prison on charges of drug trafficking. She had been arrested in November 2010 and sentenced
in late 2011 to 10 years in prison, but the case had been overturned on appeal. The court rejected
witness testimony that police had planted the drugs in Osipova’s house. Her supporters suggested
that authorities had prosecuted Osipova to pressure her husband, a leader of The Other Russia
Party, to withdraw an application to register the party.
Russia’s Presidential Human Rights Commission
Medvedev repeatedly postponed meetings with the Presidential Human Rights Commission after
last meeting with it in July 2011, although he continued to meet occasionally with its head,
Mikhail Fedotov. At the July 2011 meeting, Medvedev was presented with a preliminary report
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on the Magnitskiy case, Fedotov suggested considering amnesty for certain economic crimes, and
issues of inter-ethnic relations were discussed. In December 2011, the commission initiated
several actions, including forwarding to Medvedev a report on the Khodorkovskiy case. The
report recommended that Medvedev review the case and consider a pardon for Khodorkovskiy.
The commission also sent the report to the Moscow city court in support of a complaint by
Khodorkovskiy against the court’s guilty verdict in his second trial in 2010 (mentioned above).
The commission likewise forwarded a final report on the Magnitskiy case that recommended
reopening the investigation of the case. At the end of January 2012, the Moscow city court
rejected holding a new trial on the Khodorkovskiy case, but Fedotov called for Medvedev to
pardon Khodorkovskiy and over two dozen other imprisoned Russians. On April 23, 2012,
Medvedev pardoned Sergey Mokhnatkin, who had been jailed on charges of resisting police
during an opposition rally in Moscow in 2009.
At its last meeting under then-President Medvedev on April 28, 2012, the Human Rights
Commission was supposed to hear a report detailing problems of the Duma and presidential
election, allegedly including an estimate that Putin had actually won 52%-53% of the vote in the
presidential election. Medvedev refused to permit a discussion of the report. He called for various
new legal changes, such as the clarification of grounds used to detain demonstrators. Several
members of the commission resigned as a sign of protest against electoral irregularities or in
anticipation of a harsher human rights climate under Putin.
In July 2012, a working group to fill 13 vacancies on the Human Rights Commission began
selecting among applications to forward to Putin in September for his approval. The group
rejected over 100 applications. Some of the individuals who were rejected announced in early
September 2012 that they planned to form an alternative human rights advocacy group.
The U.S.-Russia Working Group on Civil Society
A Working Group on Civil Society, part of the U.S.-Russia Bilateral Presidential Commission
(see below, “The Obama Administration “Re-sets” Bilateral Relations”), held its first U.S.
meeting in late January 2010. As per agreement, the working group is composed mainly of
government officials and a few NGO representatives. The officials and NGO representatives met
in separate sessions, and then the two groups compared notes. The topics of discussion included
countering corporate corruption, protecting children, prison reform, and rights of immigrants (the
White House subsequently has described these topics as discussed by separate subgroups). Some
Members of Congress had called in December 2009 for the Administration to boycott the
meetings until Russia changed its head of the group.30 In late May 2010, the Working Group held
another meeting in Vladimir, Russia.31 During the presidential summit in Washington, DC, in
June 2010, a semi-official meeting of civil society groups took place on the sidelines of the
summit. Follow-on meetings of civil society groups took place in several Russian cities in
October 2010.32 A meeting of civil society groups took place in late May 2011, followed a week
later by a session of the Working Group in Washington, DC. One Russian human rights activist
not involved in the session, Lev Ponomaryev, complained that the session was top-heavy with
30 “Interview: McFaul on U.S., Russian Stereotypes and His Controversial Co-Chair,” RFE/RL, January 28, 2010.
31 Nikolaus von Twickel, “’Re-set’ Delegation Visits Vladimir Prison,” The Moscow Times, May 28, 2010; Simon
Shuster, “Russian Human Rights: Is the U.S. Backing Off?” Time, June 5, 2010.
32 C2C: U.S.-Russia Civil Society to Civil Society Summit—2010, Summary Report, International Research and
Exchanges Board, November 15, 2010.
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officials.33 In late 2011, the former heads of the Working Group—both advisors to their respective
presidents—were replaced by lower-tier diplomats, seemingly marking a lowered status for the
Working Group. The new co-chairs met in early 2012 and planned to hold a Working Group
session in mid-June 2012 in Moscow. However, this Moscow meeting apparently only involved
the co-chairs and did not address a full range of issues. The Russian co-chair claimed that the
United States had convicted two Russian citizens (including Viktor Bout) on “political grounds,”
and urged that they be returned to Russia. He also called for U.S. citizens who violated the rights
of adopted Russian children be adequately prosecuted and raised concerns that the Magnitskiy
Act threatened the rights of prospective Russian travelers to the United States.
Insurgency in the North Caucasus
Some observers have argued that Russia’s efforts to suppress insurgency in the North Caucasus—
a border area between the Black and Caspian Seas that includes the formerly breakaway
Chechnya and other ethnic-based regions—have been the most violent in Europe in recent years
in terms of ongoing military and civilian casualties and human rights abuses.34 In late 1999,
Russia’s then-Premier Putin ordered military, police, and security forces to enter the breakaway
Chechnya region. By early 2000, these forces occupied most of the region. High levels of fighting
continued for several more years and resulted in thousands of Russian and Chechen casualties and
hundreds of thousands of displaced persons. In 2005, then-Chechen rebel leader Abdul-Khalim
Saydullayev decreed the formation of a Caucasus Front against Russia among Islamic believers in
the North Caucasus, in an attempt to widen Chechnya’s conflict with Russia. After his death, his
successor, Doku Umarov, declared continuing jihad to establish an Islamic fundamentalist
Caucasus Emirate in the North Caucasus and beyond.
Russia’s pacification policy in Chechnya has involved setting up a pro-Moscow regional
government and transferring more and more local security duties to this government. An
important factor in Russia’s seeming success in Chechnya has been reliance on pro-Moscow
Chechen clans affiliated with regional President Ramzan Kadyrov. Police and paramilitary forces
under his authority have committed flagrant abuses of human rights, according to myriad rulings
by the European Court of Human Rights and other assessments.
Terrorist attacks in the North Caucasus appeared to increase from 2007 through 2010, with a
slight decrease in 2011, according to U.S. analyst Gordon Hahn. In 2010-2011, the insurgents
appeared to be focusing more on killing and wounding civilians. Although terrorist incidents
overall decreased in most of the North Caucasus in 2011, they continued to increase in Dagestan.
The number of killed or captured terrorists has increased, perhaps marking more successful
counter-terrorist efforts.35
Among recent terrorist incidents, on January 24, 2011, a suicide bombing in a publicly accessible
area of Moscow’s Domodedovo international airport resulted in over 40 reported deaths and
33 Andrey Denisov, “Khodorkovskiy May Land on Surkov-McFaul Commission Agenda: Kremlin Administration’s
Deputy Chief To Discuss Problems of Civil Society in Russia with Americans,” BBC Worldwide Monitoring, June 8,
2011.
34 For background information, see CRS Report RL32272, Bringing Peace to Chechnya? Assessments and
Implications, by Jim Nichol.
35 Gordon Hahn, “Operational Trend Lines In The Caucasus Emirate’s Terrorist Insurgency,” Islam, Islamism and
Politics in Eurasia Report, No. 56, Center for Strategic and International Studies, May 7, 2012.
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nearly 200 injuries. Doku Umarov took responsibility. Caucasian terrorists also had taken
responsibility for the 2004 bombing of two airplanes that had taken off from the same airport.
President Obama reportedly telephoned President Medvedev the next day to offer condolences to
the victims and to offer assistance in apprehending the perpetrators. In a speech to the FSB on
January 25, President Medvedev stated that “terrorism remains a major threat to the security of
our country, the main threat for Russia, for all our citizens.” Claiming that the terrorist threat is
greater in Russia than the United States, he denounced Russian security efforts that he claimed
had not matched those of the United States. He condemned lapses in police and other agency
protection at the airport and pledged to prosecute or dismiss those responsible for lapses.
In early March 2012, an alleged Caucasus Emirate plan to assassinate Putin and Medvedev,
uncovered in Ukraine, was publicized by the Russian government during the final period of the
presidential election campaign. On May 4, 2012, two suicide car bombings occurred in downtown
Makhachkala, the capital of Dagestan, reportedly killing over a dozen civilians and injuring
nearly 100.
On May 10, 2012, Russia’s National Anti-Terrorism Committee—NAK; a interagency
coordinating and advisory body—announced that Russian and Abkhazian security agents had
uncovered a plot by Umarov to launch a large-scale attack at the planned 2014 Sochi Olympics
(see below). Several large stashes of grenade launchers, surface to air missiles, mines, and other
weaponry were discovered in Abkhazia. The NAK asserted that Umarov “had close ties to
Georgia’s intelligence services,” implying that Georgia was assisting Umarov. The Georgian
Foreign Ministry called these allegations “absurd,” and pointed out that Russia has eliminated
Georgian efforts to exercise authority in Abkhazia and that Russia had not raised such claims
during meetings in Geneva on resolving issues associated with the 2008 Russia-Georgia
conflict.36
On July 19, 2012, Tatarstan Mufti Ildus Faizov was injured by a car bomb and his deputy and
head of the Tatarstan Muslim Board educational department, Valiulla Yakupov, was shot and
killed by assailants outside his home in Kazan. The “Mujahadeen of Tatarstan,” which appeared
linked to Umarov, claimed responsibility. On August 20, 2012, a car exploded in Kazan, killing
four alleged terrorists. Some observers have warned that Islamic fundamentalism has greatly
increased in Tatarstan.37
On August 28, 2012, Sufi scholar Sheikh Said-afandi al-Chirkavi (Said Atsayev) and five other
victims were killed by a suicide bomber in the village of Chirkei in Dagestan. The bombing
reportedly was carried out by Sunni Islamic extremists targeting Sufi religious leaders. The State
Department condemned the killing and raised concerns that extremist attacks were increasing in
some areas of Russia.
Many observers have suggested that these incidents are further evidence that Moscow’s ongoing
security operations in the North Caucasus—which have resulted in many human rights abuses—
as well as its efforts to boost the regional economy have not yet substantially ameliorated
instability there.
36 CEDR, May 10, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-6019 and Doc. No. CEP-950199.
37 CEDR, August 7, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-015006.
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In January 2010, an existing grouping of southern regions and republics was divided
administratively into the North Caucasus Federal District—consisting of the Chechen, Dagestan,
Ingush, Kabardino-Balkar, Karachay-Cherkess, and North Ossetia-Alania Republics and
Stavropol Kray—and the Southern Federal District—consisting of the Astrakhan, Volgograd, and
Rostov Regions, the Adygea and Kalmykia Republics, and Krasnodar Kray. A presidential envoy
was appointed for each district. The division appeared to group together most of the more restive
areas into the North Caucasus Federal District and permitted the central government and envoys
to focus on separate development plans for each district. According to some speculation, the
division also was partly driven by the 2007 selection of Sochi, in Krasnodar Kray, as the site of
the 2014 Winter Olympics, and the need to focus on building facilities and improving security in
Sochi.
A North Caucasus development strategy was promulgated in September 2010. It sets forth goals
through 2025, stressing investments in agriculture, tourism, health resorts, energy and mining,
and light industry. It also calls for encouraging ethnic Russians to resettle in the area, including by
initially setting employment quotas for ethnic Russians. Eventually, by encouraging inter-ethnic
harmony, the strategy suggests, the practice of allocating jobs by ethnicity and clan rather than
merit might be eliminated. The strategy sets forth an optimum scenario where average wages
increase by 250% and unemployment decreases by 70% by 2025. An inter-agency commission to
carry out the strategy was formed with then-Prime Minister Putin as its head. At a May 2011
session, the Regional Development Minister stated that $9.7 billion would be budgeted for
development projects in the North Caucasus through 2013.38 At a December 2011 commission
meeting, Putin rejected the views of some that the North Caucasus should be permitted to secede
from Russia, warning darkly that anti-Russian interests (presumably, foreign interests) would then
launch efforts to break up the rest of Russia. Instead, he argued, Russia must continue to foster
economic development in the region. He and other officials at the meeting called for further
reducing high unemployment rates of nearly 50% in Ingushetia and over 27% in Chechnya.39 At a
meeting of the commission in Grozny in late June 2012, the newly installed head, Prime Minister
Medvedev, pledged that economic development of the region was “one of the government’s most
important priorities,” and the new Regional Development Minister stated that up to $52 billion
was planned to develop the region over the period 2013-2025.40
On June 23, 2010, Secretary of State Clinton designated Caucasus Emirates leader Doku Umarov
as a terrorist under Presidential Executive Order 13224, which targets terrorists and those
providing support to terrorists or acts of terrorism, to help stem the flow of financial and other
assistance to Umarov. In Congress, H.Res. 1315 (Hastings), introduced on April 29, 2010, had
called on the Secretary of State to designate the Caucasus Emirate as a foreign terrorist
organization. On May 26, 2011, the United States similarly designated the Caucasus Emirate
under Presidential Executive Order 13224 as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist group, and
included Doku Umarov in its “Rewards for Justice” program, offering a reward of up to $5
million for information leading to his location.
38 Interfax, May 4, 2011.
39 Prime Minister of the Russian Federation, During a Visit to the Chechen Republic, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin
Holds a Meeting of the Government Commission on the Socio-Economic Development of the North Caucasus Federal
District in Gudermes, December 23, 2011.
40 The Moscow Times, June 20, 2012.
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Defense Reforms
Despite the sizeable reduction in the size of the armed forces since the Soviet period—from 4.3
million troops in 1986 to a reported 880,000 at present—the Russian military remains formidable
in some respects and is by far the largest in the region.41 Because of the reduced capabilities of its
conventional forces, however, Russia relies on nuclear forces to maintain its status as a major
power. There is sharp debate within the Russian armed forces about priorities between
conventional versus strategic forces and among operations, readiness, and procurement. Russia is
trying to increase security cooperation with the other Soviet successor states that belong to the
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).42 The passage of legislation in October 2009
providing for the Federation Council to authorize the use of troops abroad to protect its
“peacekeepers” and citizens, and to combat piracy at sea, appears to underline that Russia might
use military force to reinforce the “lesson” that small countries adjacent to Russia may disregard
Moscow’s interests and warnings only at their peril.
The improvement of Russia’s economy since 1999, fueled in large part by the cash inflow from
rising world oil and gas prices, enabled Russia to reverse the budgetary starvation of the military
during the 1990s. Defense spending increased substantially in most of the 2000s, and even
continued to increase slightly after the global financial crisis of 2008 impacted Russia’s economy.
Even factoring in purchasing power parity, however, Russian defense spending still lags far
behind current U.S. or former Soviet levels. The efficacy of the larger defense budgets is reduced
by systemic corruption. Some high-profile military activities have been resumed, such as large-
scale multi-national military exercises, show-the-flag naval deployments to the Mediterranean
and the Atlantic, and strategic long-range bomber patrols that approach U.S. and NATO airspace.
In February 2007, then-President Putin appointed Anatoliy Serdyukov as defense minister. With a
career outside the military establishment, many observers suggest that Serdyukov was chosen to
carry out a transformation of the armed forces from a mobilization model—large divisions only
partially staffed and dependent upon the mobilization of reserves during emergencies—to
permanently staffed smaller brigades. Problems of force composition, training, command and
control, equipment, and doctrine were highlighted during the August 2008 Russia-Georgia
conflict.43 Partly in response, a reform plan entitled “The Future Outlook of the Russian
Federation Armed Forces and Priorities for its Creation for the period of 2009–2020” was
launched in October 2008 that called for accelerating planned cuts in the bloated officer corps,
revamping the training of non-commissioned officers, cutting the number of personnel at the
Defense Ministry and General Staff, and reducing the number of higher military schools. Also,
the four-tier command system of military districts, armies, divisions, and regiments would be
altered to a three-tier system of strategic and tactical commands and brigades. The total size of the
armed forces would be reduced from 1.2 million to 1 million, according to this plan.
During 2009, the brigade system for ground forces was set up and other reforms were carried out.
Efforts to shift to a professional (contract) military faltered, and conscription of some portion of
the armed forces remains a long-term policy. The armed forces now face a crisis in finding
enough young men to conscript for a one-year term of service given a sharp decline in births in
41 For more detail, see CRS Report R42006, Russian Military Reform and Defense Policy, by Jim Nichol.
42 Members include Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Moldova, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Ukraine, and
Uzbekistan. Georgia withdrew following the August 2008 Russia-Georgia conflict.
43 The Military Balance, p. 211.
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past years and unhealthy living conditions. Alternatives include officially acknowledging and
adjusting to an armed forces well below 1 million or increasing the length of service.
In late 2010, the existing six military districts were consolidated into Western, Eastern, Southern
and Central military districts. An over $700 billion weapons modernization plan for 2011-2020
also was launched. Substantial modernization is contingent on rebuilding the largely obsolete
defense industrial complex. Policymakers decided to import some weapons and technologies to
spur this rebuilding effort. Beginning in 2009, Russia negotiated with France over the purchase of
a newly designed French amphibious assault warship, called the Mistral. Some Members of
Congress raised concerns with France over the Mistral negotiations, as did the country of
Georgia, which feared that Russia might in the future use the ships against it. In mid-June 2011,
Russia’s Rosoboronexport (Russian Defense Export firm) General Director Anatoly Isaikin
signed a contract with France’s DCNS (Direction des Constructions Navales) Director Patrick
Boissier on the purchase of two Mistral-class warships. The agreement calls for technology
transfers necessary for the construction of the hulls and for information management and
communications, but for no weapons systems to be transferred. The completed warships may be
deployed to the Pacific Fleet. Two more Mistrals reportedly will be built in new shipyard
facilities in Kronstadt, Russia, after which the facilities will be used to build other warships.44 The
policy of legally acquiring some arms technologies from abroad came under more scrutiny in
2012, after the appointment of former NATO emissary Dmitriy Rogozin as deputy prime minister
in charge of arms procurement. He and Putin have appeared to oppose the continuation of foreign
arms technology acquisitions.
On May 7, 2012, immediately following Putin’s inauguration, edicts were signed on greatly
boosting military pay, pensions, and housing allowances; on increasing the number of troops
under contract; on creating a reserve of troops; and on modernizing defense industries (OPK).
One Russian critic pointed out that none of these spending initiatives had been included in the
2012 budget or planned budgets for 2013-2014, and warned that the initiatives would raise
military spending as a percentage of GDP to over 4% (and possibly much more, given the opaque
nature of much of this spending), approaching the U.S. percentage.45 At a conference on defense
industries on May 10, 2012, President Putin stressed that $89 billion out the $700 billion
allocated for weapons modernization through 2020 was targeted for modernizing the defense
industrial sector and increasing pay and educational opportunities for defense workers. Putin had
announced several of these defense initiatives in an earlier presidential campaign article.
In a meeting with his Security Council in late August 2012, President Putin argued that the 2011-
2020 weapons procurement plan was similar to the five-year crash industrial development plans
launched by Stalin in the 1930s. At the same time, he admitted that the plan already had faltered,
with deadlines and specifications for weapons procurement not met. While allowing that
cooperation with “foreign partners” was desirable in some areas, he stressed that Russia should
not merely “launch screwdriver facilities assembling foreign ... military hardware,” but should
develop the full range of capabilities, from weapons design through series production.46
44 CEDR, January 26, 2010, Doc. No. CEP-349004.
45 CEDR, May 15, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-358003.
46 The Kremlin, President of Russia, Vladimir Putin Held an Expanded-Format Security Council Meeting, Novo-
Ogarevo, Moscow Region, August 31, 2012.
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The Russian military announced a boosted fall 2012 conscription. Reportedly, military budget
constraints have forced authorities to seek budget cuts, and they settled on reducing the
recruitment of contract (professional) soldiers and increasing the number of conscripts, rather
than cutting the overall size of the armed forces.
U.S. Perspectives
As part of the Obama Administration’s “reset” in U.S.-Russia relations, at the July 2009 U.S.-
Russia Summit, the two sides agreed to the resumption of military-to-military activities, which
had been suspended since the August 2008 Russia-Georgia conflict. The United States has
pursued these relations in order to promote cooperation in counter-terrorism and international
peace-keeping, including Russia’s support for U.S. and ISAF operations in Afghanistan, to
advocate democracy and respect for human rights within Russian military, and also to assess
Russian military reforms and civil-military relations. In September 2010, the United States and
Russia also agreed to set up a Working Group on Defense Relations, with eight subgroups
ranging from logistics to strategy, which have permitted the two countries to compare policies
and practices. The brief public accounts of these meetings seem to indicate that Russia seeks
knowledge of best practices as part of its modernization effort. Bilateral military cooperation also
has been evidenced by the signing of a memorandum of understanding on counter-terrorism
cooperation in May 2011 by Makarov and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral
Mike Mullen. Although agreeing at the July 2009 summit to also renew the activities of the Joint
Commission on POW/MIAs—that seeks to account for personnel from World War II, the Korean
War, the Vietnam War, and the Cold War, including Soviet military personnel unaccounted for in
Afghanistan—Russia only moved in June 2011 to appoint its co-chair, Defense Ministry official
Yekaterina Priyezzheva, and 30 commissioners. The Joint Commission held its first meeting
under the new Russian co-chair in St. Petersburg in June 2012.
In late January 2012, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper presented the intelligence
community’s annual worldwide threat assessment, which included an appraisal that Russia’s 10-
year arms modernization plan faces complications posed by “funding, bureaucratic, and cultural
hurdles, coupled with the challenge of reinvigorating a military industrial base that deteriorated
for more than a decade after the Soviet collapse.” Overall, he estimated, the military reforms
launched by Serdyukov “will yield improvements that will allow the Russian military to more
rapidly defeat its smaller neighbors and remain the dominant military force in the post-Soviet
space, but will not—and are not intended to—enable Moscow to conduct sustained offensive
operations against NATO collectively.” He also assessed that “at least until Russia’s high
precision conventional arms achieve practical operational utility, Moscow will embrace nuclear
deterrence as the focal point of its defense planning,” and will continue to view its nuclear forces
“as critical for ensuring Russian sovereignty and relevance on the world stage, and for offsetting
its military weaknesses vis-à-vis potential opponents with stronger militaries.”47
47 U.S. Senate, Select Committee on Intelligence, Statement for the Record on the Worldwide Threat Assessment of the
US Intelligence Community, James R. Clapper, Director of National Intelligence, January 31, 2012.
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Trade, Economic, and Energy Issues
Russia and the Global Economic Crisis48
The Russian economy was hit hard by the global financial crisis and resulting economic
downturn. The crisis exposed weaknesses in the economy, including its significant dependence on
the production and export of oil and other natural resources and its weak financial system. Russia
shows signs of economic recovery, but persistent flaws in the economy could limit the recovery’s
depth and length.
Before the global financial crisis, Russia experienced a decade of strong economic growth. From
1999 to 2008, Russia’s gross domestic product (GDP) increased 6.9% on average per year in
contrast to an average annual decline in GDP of 6.8% during the previous seven years (1992-
1998). The surge in economic growth—largely the result of increases in world oil prices—helped
raise the Russian standard of living and brought a large degree of economic stability that Russia
had not experienced since the collapse of the Soviet Union at the end of 1991. Russia’s
government revenues increased, and that, together with fiscal discipline, allowed the government
to generate budget surpluses after years of large deficits. Economic growth also contributed to
strong popular support for Vladimir Putin and Dmitriy Medvedev.
However, in 2008, Russia faced a rapid decrease in the prices for oil and other commodities. It
also faced investor unease caused in part by Russia’s military confrontation with Georgia in
August 2008 and also by the Russian government’s reassertion of control over major industries,
especially in the energy sector. Along with these events, the global financial crisis hit Russia in
the latter part of 2008 as foreign banking credits, on which many Russian companies depend,
decreased. As a result, Russia’s period of economic growth came to an abrupt end. Although
Russian real GDP increased 5.6% in 2008 as a whole, it did not grow at all during the fourth
quarter of 2008. Russian GDP declined 7.9% in 2009. The decline occurred across most sectors of
the economy, with manufacturing, construction, and transportation hit especially hard.49
The economic downturn also exposed Russia’s dependence on the production and export of oil,
natural gas, and other fossil fuels for economic growth and government revenues. On July 4,
2008, the price of a barrel of Urals-32 (the Russian benchmark price for oil) peaked at $137.61
and declined to a low point of $34.02 by January 2, 2009—a drop of 75.3% in six months.50 The
fuels accounted for about two-thirds of Russia’s export revenues and for more than half of
government revenues. Such a sharp drop in oil prices, along with heightened government
expenditures to stimulate the economy, forced the government to incur its first budget deficit in
10 years in 2009—a deficit equivalent to 5.9% of GDP.51
The Russian government responded in 2008-2009 to the global financial crisis with various fiscal
measures including heavier spending and tax cuts equivalent to more than 6% of GDP. These
48 Prepared by William H. Cooper, Specialist in International Trade and Finance.
49 Economist Intelligence Unit.
50 CRS calculations based on data from the U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. Energy Information Administration,
http://www.eia.doe.gov.
51 Economist Intelligence Unit, Country Report—Russia, September 2010, p. 21.
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measures were designed mostly to support the banking system, increase social expenditures, and
assist large state enterprises. The stimulus also included monetary measures that included
reducing refinance rates by the Central Bank of Russia (CBR).52 The CBR also drew down
foreign reserves in order to defend the ruble against rapid depreciation.
Russia is slowly emerging from its recession. Russian real GDP is estimated to have increased by
4.0% in 2010, and 4.3% in 2011. Russia is once again benefitting from an increase in world oil
prices. Nevertheless, in the long term, unless Russia can reduce its dependence on the production
of oil and other commodities and diversify and reform its economy, any recovery will likely
remain fragile.53 On several occasions, former President Medvedev expressed the need for Russia
to diversify its economy.54 Looking ahead an important issue regarding Russia is whether
President Putin will carry through on economic reform or protect the status quo.
Russia’s Accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO)
and PNTR for Russia
In 1993, Russia formally applied for accession to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT). In 1995, its application was taken up by the World Trade Organization (WTO), the
successor organization of the GATT. Russia is the largest economy not in the WTO. However,
after a number of fits and starts during the 18-year process, the 153 members of the WTO, on
December 16, 2011, invited Russia to join the organization. Russia officially joined the WTO on
August 22, 2012, after both houses of the national legislature approved the protocol of accession.
In joining the WTO, Russia has committed to bring its trade laws and practices into compliance
with WTO rules. Those commitments include nondiscriminatory treatment of imports of goods
and services; binding tariff levels; ensuring transparency when implementing trade measures;
limiting agriculture subsidies; enforcing intellectual property rights for foreign holders of such
rights; and forgoing the use of local content requirements and other trade-related investment
measures.
Congress does not have a direct role in Russia’s accession to the WTO but has an indirect role in
the form of permanent normal trade relations (PNTR) status. “Normal trade relations” (NTR), or
“most-favored-nation” (MFN), trade status denotes nondiscriminatory treatment of a trading
partner compared to that of other countries.55 Title IV of the U.S. Trade Act of 1974 applies
conditions on Russia’s status, including compliance with freedom of emigration criteria under
Section 402—the so-called Jackson-Vanik amendment. Therefore, the United States would not be
in compliance with the WTO requirement of “unconditional MFN” without Congress lifting the
applicability of Title IV as it applies to Russia and authorizing the President to grant Russia
PNTR before Russia enters the WTO. As a result, the United States has had to invoke the WTO
non-application provision, thus declaring that the WTO obligations, rules, and mechanisms will
52 IMF. Russian Federation: 2010 Article IV Consultation—Staff Report; and Public Information Notice on the
Executive Board Discussion, July 2010, p. 8.
53 The World Bank, Russian Economic Report, No. 22, June 2010, p. 1.
54 Economist Intelligence Unit. Country Report—Russia. January 2010.
55 MFN has been used in international agreements and at one time was used in U.S. law to denote the fundamental trade
principle of nondiscriminatory treatment. However, “MFN” was replaced in U.S. law, on July 22, 1998, by the term
“normal trade relations.” (P.L. 105-206). MFN is still used in international trade agreements. The terms are used
interchangeably in this report.
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not apply in its trade with Russia. The United States can “dis-invoke” it, if and when Congress
grants PNTR. In the meantime, Russia will not be obligated to apply many of the commitments
its has made in acceding to the WTO, such as improved market access in services and in some
agriculture trade, to the United States, thus potentially placing U.S. exporters and investors at a
competitive disadvantage.
On July 19, 2012, the Senate Finance Committee favorably reported S. 3406, and on July 26, the
House Ways and Means Committee ordered favorably reported H.R. 6156. The two bills would
remove the application of Title IV to trade with Russia and authorize the President to grant PNTR
to Russia by proclamation. S. 3406 also contains language from S. 1039, the “Magnitskiy bill”
(discussed above). No dates have been established for consideration of the legislation in either
House.
Modernization Initiatives56
Toward the end of his presidency, Vladimir Putin called for an updated economic strategy to the
year 2020 to guide his chosen successor, Dmitriy Medvedev. The goal of the strategy was to make
Russia one of the five major economic powers in terms of technological innovation, energy
development, and finance. The global financial crisis led the Medvedev government to
promulgate an “anti-crisis plan” in early 2009, but it pledged to retain the goals of “Strategy
2020.” In May 2009, Medvedev complained that technological innovation was lagging, including
because private businesses were not making long-term investments, and he decreed the
establishment of a “Presidential Commission on Modernization and Technological Development
of the Russian Economy.” The foci of the meetings of the Modernization Commission were on
medical technology, pharmaceuticals, energy efficiency, nuclear technology, computer hardware
and software, space technology, and telecommunications. It had a yearly budget for providing
seed money for innovative projects.
The former Medvedev government compiled a list of countries that are advanced in high
technology of interest and invited these states to invest in Russia. In a foreign policy speech in
July 2010, President Medvedev argued that the global economic crisis had brought about a
“paradigm shift in international relations [which] opens for us a unique opportunity to put
Russia’s foreign policy instruments to the most effective use possible to assist the country’s
modernization.” He called for his diplomats and trade officials to forge a “modernization
alliance” with Western democracies, such as the European Union and the United States, and other
countries.57 In a September 2010 speech, Medvedev appeared to argue that if existing government
rules and regulations are rigorously applied and living standards are improved, then there is
progress in democratization.58
During a meeting of the Modernization Commission and an associated trade show in late October
2011, President Medvedev attempted to dispel rumors that government funding for modernization
initiatives would be reduced because of budget deficits. However, Russian media reported that the
Finance Ministry planned to substantially reduce the budget for the Modernization Commission
56 Prepared by Jim Nichol, Specialist in Russian and Eurasian Affairs.
57 CEDR, June 24, 2010, Doc. No. CEP-4950250; The Kremlin, Speech by Dmitry Medvedev, President of the Russian
Federation, at the Meeting with Russian Ambassadors and Permanent Representatives to International Organizations,
July 12, 2010.
58 CEDR, September 13, 2010, Doc. No. CEP-4013; Doc. No. CEP-4009.
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in 2013-2014, and that the overall budget for innovation was being reduced from $2.3 billion in
2012 to $900 million in 2013 and even less thereafter. One Russian official explained that
innovation funding was being transferred to military acquisition. According to one report, the
frequency of meetings of the Modernization Commission and its sub-groups had fallen off, and
the public had become disillusioned, since they had not seen any benefits from the modernization
initiative. In June 2012, Russian media reported that the Putin administration planned to revamp
the body as the “Russian Council for Economic Modernization and Innovation.”
U.S. critic Leon Aron argues that in order to modernize, Russia must stop persecuting Russian
businessmen, strengthen democratic institutions, protect property rights, and withdraw its troops
from Georgia.59
The Skolkovo Center for Innovation
At a meeting of the Modernization Commission in February 2010, Medvedev announced that a
campus for high technology research and commerce would be constructed outside of Moscow
near the town of Skolkovo. To attract domestic and foreign firms, tax benefits have been offered.
Construction began in 2011, but the site remains mostly barren.
Russian media have reported that planned government spending on the Skolkovo Center will be
reduced in 2013. Officials at Skolkovo argue that the government funds are being reduced as per
long-term planning as private funding increases. Reportedly, Medvedev has remained the head of
the board of Skolkovo since Putin became president. Medvedev has urged that Russian state-
owned corporations contribute funds to Skolkovo. In late May 2012, Russian Technologies (and
its subsidiary, Kamaz truck company) invested in research and development at Skolkovo.
According to U.S. critic Matthew Jojansky, Russia is unlikely to be successful in creating a
Silicon Valley-like environment at Skolkovo, because it “wants to create a little bubble outside of
Moscow in which the rule of law, [such as] protections for intellectual property, will all be there
within this bubble but not … in the rest of Russia.”60
U.S. Interest in Skolkovo
The United States and other countries and international corporations have pledged to become
involved in the Skolkovo Center for Innovation, and many others have indicated interest in the
project. After visiting Silicon Valley in late June 2010, President Medvedev traveled to
Washington, DC, for a presidential summit meeting and a conclave hosted by the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce. At the summit, the two presidents issued a “Joint Statement on a Strategic
Partnership in Innovation” that expressed the intent of the two sides “to begin new and dedicated
efforts to promote collaboration in the areas of development of civil technologies, open standards,
and innovation and technology policy.” The Skolkovo Innovation Center appeared to be
referenced when the two sides pledged to develop “cooperation on innovation in science and
technology through both existing mechanisms of strategic partnership and through new
59 Leon Aron, Dmitriy Medvedev’s Modernization Thaw: Objectives, Actions, and Policy Tests, American Enterprise
Institute, Summer 2010.
60 Larisa Epatko, “Q&A: Medvedev Meets With Obama on Modernization Plan, Arms Control,” PBS Newshour, June
24, 2010.
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cooperation instruments at the level of government institutions, non-governmental organizations,
and the private sector.”
At the “U.S.-Russia Business Summit” hosted by the Chamber of Commerce, President Obama
specifically mentioned the Skolkovo Innovation Center, stating that he had “pledged to President
Medvedev that the United States wants to be Russia’s partner as he pursues his vision of
modernization and innovation in Russia, including his initiative to create a Russian Silicon Valley
outside of Moscow. American companies and universities were among the first to invest in this
effort.”61 Among recent interest, in late October 2011, President Medvedev witnessed the signing
of an education and research agreement between the Skolkovo Center and the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT). Some of the prospective Skolkovo Center students and others
visited MIT in January 2012 to examine innovation techniques.
Russian Energy Policy62
The Russian oil and natural gas industries are important players in the global energy market,
particularly in Europe and Eurasia. In 2011, Russia had by far the largest natural gas reserves in
the world, possessing 21.4% of the world’s total. It had over 5% of global oil reserves. Firms in
these industries are either directly controlled by the Russian government or are subject to heavy
Russian government influence. The personal and political fortunes of Russia’s leaders are tied to
the energy firms. Russian government revenues (in 2011, about half of total Russian government
revenue came from oil and natural gas taxes) and Russia’s economic revival in the Putin era has
been heavily dependent on the massive wealth generated by energy exports, mainly to Europe.
Some Members of Congress, U.S. officials, and European leaders (particularly those in Central
and Eastern Europe) have claimed that European dependence on Russian energy and Russia’s
growing influence in large segments of Europe’s energy distribution infrastructure poses a long-
term threat to transatlantic relations. Russia accounts for about one-quarter of the EU’s natural
gas supplies. Some central and eastern European countries are almost entirely dependent on
Russia for their oil and natural gas. Analysts have noted that Russia views its natural resources as
a political tool. Russia’s “National Security Strategy to 2020,” states that “the resource potential
of Russia” is one of the factors that has “expanded the possibilities of the Russian Federation to
strengthen its influence on the world arena.”63
This dependence does not go only in one direction, however. Europe is also the most important
market for Russian natural gas exports, a calculation the Russians must take into account when
developing its political relations with Europe. The bulk of Gazprom’s natural gas exports go to
Europe and Eurasia. In 2010, almost 55% of Gazprom’s natural gas exports went to the EU. Over
28% went to the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), many of which have been
61 The White House, Office of the Press Secretary, Joint Statement by the Presidents of the United States of America
and the Russian Federation on a Strategic Partnership in Innovation, June 24, 2010; Remarks by President Obama and
President Medvedev of Russia at the U.S.-Russia Business Summit, June 24, 2010.
62 Prepared by Steven Woehrel, Specialist in European Affairs.
63 The text of the National Security Strategy, which was released in 2009, can be found at the website of the Russian
National Security Council at http://www.scrf.gov.ru/documents/99.html
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unreliable in paying what they owe and/or receive natural gas at subsidized prices.64 The rest went
to Turkey and other non-EU countries in Europe, and to Asia.65
Concerns about Russian energy policy have centered largely on Russia’s natural gas supplies to
Europe. In 2009, the state-controlled Russian natural gas firm Gazprom halted all gas supplies
transiting Ukraine for nearly three weeks after the two sides failed to reach agreement on several
issues, including a debt allegedly owed by Ukraine to Gazprom and the price that Ukraine would
pay for gas supplies. At the time, about 80% of Europe’s natural gas imports from Russia
transited Ukrainian pipelines. A similar Russian-Ukrainian dispute had led to a gas cutoff to
Europe at the beginning of 2006. In 2010 and 2011, disputes between Russian and Belarus over a
variety of issues, including energy prices, debts owed by Belarus, and transit fees paid by Russia
for the use of Belarusian pipelines, led to temporary reductions of oil and natural gas supplies to
Belarus and neighboring countries. These incidents have provided further evidence of Russia’s
unreliability as an energy supplier, according to some observers.
Conversely, concerns about the reliability of gas transit through Ukraine and Belarus have caused
Russia and some European countries to support new pipeline projects to bypass these two
countries and others in Central and Eastern Europe. In 2011, Gazprom began transporting natural
gas directly from Russia to Germany under the Baltic Sea via a new pipeline, known as Nord
Stream. When a second pipeline is operational in late 2012, Nord Stream will have a total
capacity of 55 billion cubic meters (bcm) per year, as compared to the Ukrainian pipeline system,
which usually delivers about 120 bcm per year. Russia is studying the possibility of a third and
even a fourth Nord Stream pipeline, but Germany has rejected the idea so far.
Many European Union countries are concerned about the possible consequences of
overdependence on Russia for energy. The EU has supported the building of a “Southern
Corridor” of pipelines circumventing Russian territory that would transport Central Asian gas
supplies to Europe. At least one new pipeline will transport Azerbaijan’s gas from its Shah Deniz
2 project to Europe. Russia has tried to undermine the Southern Corridor effort in many ways,
including by casting doubt on the legality of the planned and EU-supported Trans-Caspian
Pipeline, which would transport gas from Turkmenistan (which has very large gas reserves)
across the Caspian Sea to connect up with other pipelines that would carry gas on to Europe.
Russia has also tried to maintain its grip on EU energy supplies by supporting a rival project to
the Southern Corridor. In November 2007, Gazprom and the Italian firm ENI signed an
agreement to build South Stream, which would run from Russia under the Black Sea to Bulgaria,
with branches to Austria, Italy, and Greece. Serbia, Hungary, and Slovenia have also signed on to
the project, and Croatia may do so as well. Russia plans to start construction of South Stream
before the end of 2012, and begin deliveries in 2015.The pipeline has a projected capacity of 63
bcm per year.
In order to build political support in European countries for South Stream, Russia enticed key
Western European companies to participate. It has also discussed the possibility of modifying the
pipeline’s route in order to play potential transit countries off against each other. However, some
64 The Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) includes Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan with Turkmenistan and Ukraine having unofficial status. Georgia
withdrew from the CIS in 2009.
65 Sergey Paltsev, “Russian Natural Gas Export Potential Up to 2050,” MIT Center for Energy and Environmental
Policy Research, July 2011.
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observers are skeptical about South Stream’s prospects, pointing to its high cost. Observers also
question Russia’s ability to significantly expand its gas production so that it can fill current and
planned pipelines. Russia could also free up supplies for export by curbing growing domestic
demand for gas through further increases in now-subsidized domestic prices, but it has put off
doing so, perhaps for political reasons.
While building pipelines that would circumvent Ukraine and Belarus, Russia continues its long-
standing efforts to gain control of their pipeline systems. Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych
has expressed concern about the impact of Nord Stream and South Stream on transit volumes
through Ukraine’s pipeline system. He has offered Russia partial control of the Ukrainian pipeline
system (with EU firms gaining part of the control as well) in exchange for a share in natural gas
fields in Russia and guaranteed transit volumes through Ukraine’s pipelines. Russia has not
accepted Kyiv’s terms. Gazprom officials have warned Ukrainian leaders that they should sell
control of Ukraine’s pipelines to it while it can get a good price. Otherwise, they say, Gazprom
may find it more profitable to build and use South Stream rather than modernize Ukraine’s aging
system. Russia has repeatedly rejected Ukraine’s demands to renegotiate the current gas supply
contract in order to cut the price Kyiv pays for gas. Ukraine’s seeming desperation to secure
lower gas prices could induce it to give Gazprom de facto control over its pipelines in exchange
for cheaper gas. However, for now, Ukraine is taking another path—trying to sharply reduce its
intake of expensive Russian gas and increase domestic and other foreign energy sources.
Russia has had more success in gaining control of Belarus’s gas infrastructure. In 2011, Gazprom
completed a deal to buy all the shares of Beltransgaz, Belarus’s gas pipeline transport company,
in exchange for sharply reduced gas prices. The Yamal-Europe gas pipeline, which runs through
Belarus and Poland, has a capacity of 33 bcm. Gazprom has said it plans to increase the amount
of gas supplied to EU countries via Belarus. Gazprom is currently studying how to modernize and
expand the capacity of the Belarusian pipeline system, perhaps putting yet more pressure on
Ukraine to cede control of its system to Russia.
Russia’s formerly dominant role in the transport of Central Asian energy supplies faces
challenges from demand in Asian countries. A pipeline from Turkmenistan to China opened in
2009, which is expected to deliver 40 bcm of gas per year by 2015. Turkmenistan has also
expanded its gas pipeline capacity to Iran to reach 20 bcm.
Other factors could diminish Russia’s leverage over Eurasian natural gas supplies. The
development of previously difficult-to-develop “unconventional” gas deposits, including shale
gas, in the United States, Europe and elsewhere could diversify supplies and keep prices down.
The growth of the spot market for natural gas and the expansion of liquefied natural gas
infrastructure in Europe could also help diversify supplies as well as reduce dependence on
Russian-controlled pipelines. Companies are also seeking less reliance on long-term, inflexible
“take or pay” contracts in general.
Russia has threatened to supply more gas to China and other Asian countries if Europe does not
exempt Gazprom from the EU’s Third Energy Package, which bars companies from controlling
both the production of energy supplies and their transport and distribution. By 2030, the Russian
government plans to increase gas exports to Asian countries such as China, South Korea, and
Japan until they make up 19%-20% of the total. However, Russia has a considerable way to go to
meet this objective. In 2010, gas exports to Asia made up about 7% of total Russian gas exports,
all in the form of LNG. Long-standing Russian hopes of providing large amounts of natural gas to
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China by pipeline have been stymied by the fact that China has been unwilling to offer anything
close to the price Europe pays for Russian natural gas.66
Foreign Policy
Russia and the West
After the collapse of the Soviet Union and the turmoil associated with the Yeltsin period, a
consensus emerged as the Putin era began on reestablishing Russia’s global prestige as a “great
power” and its dominance in “the former Soviet space.” The pursuit of these goals by then-
President Putin and his closest policy advisors seemed to be driven by the belief that the West,
and in particular the United States, had taken advantage of Russia’s political turmoil and overall
weakness during the Yeltsin years. Putin and his advisors were determined to restore what they
believed to be Russia’s rightful place as a significant influence on the world stage.
Fueled in part by the massive inflow of petro-dollars, Moscow’s self-confidence grew over the
several years prior to the late 2008 global economic downturn, and officials and observers in
Europe and the United States expressed growing concern about what they viewed as an
increasingly contrarian Russian foreign policy. This was evident in recent years in Russia’s sharp
political struggles with Estonia and Ukraine, its opposition to a planned U.S. missile defense
system in Eastern Europe, the suspension of compliance with the Conventional Armed Forces in
Europe Treaty, and its strong opposition to NATO membership for Ukraine and Georgia.
According to analyst Dmitri Trenin, then-President Putin became greatly alarmed following the
“orange revolution” in Ukraine in 2004-2005 and the “tulip revolution” in Kyrgyzstan later in
2005, and his attitude toward the United States hardened. Trenin claims that Putin viewed these
popular revolts as “part of a U.S.-conceived and led conspiracy. At minimum, these activities ...
aimed at drastically reducing Russia’s influence.... At worst, they constituted a dress rehearsal for
... installing a pro-U.S. liberal puppet regime in the Kremlin.”67 In February 2007, at the 43rd
annual Munich Security Conference, President Putin delivered a particularly harsh speech
attacking Bush Administration policies and condemning the “unipolar” world he alleged the
United States was creating.68
In contrast to Putin, President Medvedev was considered by some observers to be a potentially
pragmatic leader who could shift Russia’s attitudes more positively toward the United States and
the West. However, during Medvedev’s first year or so in office, Russia’s relations with the West
became increasingly tense. In the aftermath of the August 2008 Russia-Georgia conflict, relations
between Russia and the West reached what many considered to be their lowest point since the
Cold War. Russia continued to voice strong opposition to NATO enlargement to Georgia and
Ukraine; invaded Georgia and occupied two of its regions; refused to recognize Kosovo’s
independence; cut off or reduced energy supplies in disputes with Ukraine and Belarus; boosted
66 For more information on Russia’s official energy strategy, see Energy Strategy of Russia for the Period up to 2030, at
http://www.energystrategy.ru/projects/docs/ES-2030_(Eng).pdf.
67 Dmitri Trenin, “Russia’s Spheres of Interest, not Influence,” The Washington Quarterly, October 2009.
68 The full text of Vladimir Putin’s speech at the 43rd Munich Conference on Security Policy, February 10, 2007, can be
found at http://www.securityconference.de.
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ties with Cuba and Venezuela; and attempted to end the use of airbases in Central Asia by the
United States and NATO. However, President Obama’s efforts to “reset” bilateral ties in 2009
somewhat overlapped and then ameliorated some of these elements of tension.
On May 7, 2012, as one of his first decrees upon being inaugurated as president, Putin called for
the writing of a new foreign policy concept to reflect an allegedly emerging “polycentric world”
(essentially meaning the ebbing of U.S. global power and influence).69 Perhaps as one means to
counter U.S. power and influence, he called for emphasizing the role of the United Nations, but
he also pledged to expand Russia’s support for peacekeeping operations. Among his foreign
policy priorities:
• He stated that relations with the CIS were a main focus of foreign policy,
including the implementation of the late 2011 Free Trade Zone Treaty;
strengthening of the Russia-Belarus Union State; deepening cooperation among
Russia, Belarus, and Kazakhstan within the Single Economic Space; creating a
Eurasian Economic Union by 2015; bolstering the CSTO; working to settle the
Dniestr problem and the NK conflict; and promoting the sovereignty of Abkhazia
and South Ossetia.
• On Russia-U.S. relations, he called for raising bilateral ties to a “truly strategic
level” by bolstering economic cooperation and “non-discriminatory” trade,
expanding the role of the Bi-national Presidential Commission, liberalizing the
visa regime, and implementing the START Treaty. At the same time, Putin called
for blocking “extraterritorial sanctions by the United States against Russian
corporate bodies and individuals,” and warned that further arms control
agreements depended on taking into account “all factors” affecting global
strategic stability. He also called for obtaining “firm guarantees” that U.S. missile
defenses are not targeted against Russia.
• On Russia-EU relations, he called for working on a strategic partnership accord
and implementation of the partnership for modernization program. On Euro-
Atlantic cooperation, he continued to call for concluding a new European
security treaty70 and stated that the further development of Russia-NATO ties
depended on NATO’s recognition of Russian security interests.
• He called for rebuffing criticism of Russia’s human rights record and expanding
consular and other efforts to protect the rights of Russian citizens abroad,
including of adopted children. He also called for seeming Soviet-type efforts to
expand the influence of Russian culture and language worldwide, increase
propaganda, and to bolster the use of the Public Chamber and Russian NGOs as
agents of influence.
69 President of the Russian Federation, On Measures in the Implementation of the Russian Federation’s Foreign Policy,
May 7, 2012.
70 The call for such a treaty had been issued by newly inaugurated President Medvedev in June 2008, and a draft for
discussion was released in late 2009. Many Western observers viewed the Russian proposal as a means to vitiate or
replace existing institutions such as the OSCE and NATO. Analyst Richard Weitz has argued that newly inaugurated
President Putin has shifted emphasis to his Eurasian Union concept, which actually aims to re-create in some form the
Soviet-era east-west divide in Europe. The Rise and Fall of Medvedev’s European Security Treaty, The German
Marshall Fund of the United States, May 2012.
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• On other issues, he called for the settlement of the Arab-Israeli conflict and the
issues of Iran’s and North Korea’s nuclear programs using current negotiating
formats and principles. He appeared to call for aggressively asserting Russian
sovereignty over the Arctic and maritime borders and Russia’s presence in
Antarctica.
At a conference of Russian ambassadors on July 9, 2012, President Putin called for the diplomats
to work harder to present Russia in a good light abroad as part of an enhanced arsenal of “soft
power” instruments of foreign policy. Critics argued that he appeared to believe that Russia’s
domestic and foreign policy actions were not to blame for its image problems abroad. He warned
that the electoral campaign in the United States was contributing to anti-Russian sentiments, such
as the Magnitskiy bill and continued support for European missile defense. He also urged that the
diplomats should more actively promote Russian arms sales.71
Russian analyst Liliya Shevtsova argues that Medvedev’s presidency presented a face of foreign
policy reasonableness that facilitated the “reset” in U.S.-Russia relations and the EU-Russia
Partnership for Modernization. She argues that these ties would not have developed if Putin had
remained the visible leader, but that the West was essentially responding to the fictitious
liberalization of the Russian political system.72
NATO-Russia Relations73
Post-Cold War efforts to build a cooperative NATO-Russia partnership have had mixed results, at
best. Russian views toward NATO, particularly since the beginning of the Putin era, have been
marked predominantly by suspicion and skepticism regarding NATO’s intentions. After NATO-
Russia relations reached a new low in the wake of Russia’s 2008 invasion of Georgia, the two
sides renewed efforts to strengthen ties. At NATO’s November 2010 Summit in Lisbon, Portugal,
NATO Heads of State and then-Russian President Medvedev marked what they hoped would be
the beginning of a new era NATO-Russia relations, based on practical cooperation on common
security challenges. Observers point out though that while some progress has been made, Russian
officials, and particularly President Putin, remain critical of many aspects of NATO policy. They
note, for example, that President Putin did not attend NATO’s most recent summit of alliance
leaders and major partner countries, held in Chicago in May 2012. At the same time, some NATO
members continue to disagree on their assessment of Russian intentions.
The principal institutional mechanism for NATO-Russia relations is the NATO-Russia Council
(NRC), established in May 2002, five years after the 1997 NATO-Russia Founding Act provided
the formal basis for bilateral cooperation. Recognizing that both NATO and Russia face many of
the same global challenges and share similar strategic priorities, Russian and NATO leaders
structured the NRC as a “consensus” forum of equals with a goal of “political dialogue, common
approaches, and joint operations.”
Most observers agree that despite having advanced NATO-Russia cooperation in some key areas,
the NRC has failed to live up to its potential. The NRC’s perceived shortcomings are often
attributed to Russian suspicion about NATO’s long-term intentions. Many in Russia viewed
71 CEDR, July 10, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-041005.
72 Open Source Center, Europe: Daily Report, March 14, 2012, Doc. No. EUP-232005.
73 Prepared by Paul Belkin, Analyst in European Affairs.
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NATO’s enlargement in 1999 and 2004 to 10 former Soviet-aligned states as a serious affront to
Russian power and prestige and Russian leaders continue to oppose the idea of NATO
enlargement to former eastern bloc countries.74 The establishment of U.S. and NATO airbases in
Central Asia for operations in Afghanistan after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and a
United States decision to establish military facilities, albeit non-permanent, in Bulgaria and
Romania after NATO’s 2004 enlargement were viewed by some in Moscow as further evidence
of an encirclement of Russia by NATO and the United States.
Tensions between Russia and NATO escalated in the wake of Russia’s August 2008 invasion of
Georgia, after which the two sides suspended formal ties in the NATO-Russia Council. Russia’s
actions sparked a strong debate within the alliance over how Europe should react to what many
considered a new, more aggressive Russian foreign policy intended to reestablish a Russian
sphere of influence along its border with Europe. Some argued that NATO’s unwillingness or
inability to prevent Russia from moving to establish a permanent military presence in Abkhazia
and South Ossetia diminished the credibility of the alliance’s core principle of collective defense,
as enshrined in Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty. Although Georgia is not a member of the
alliance, Georgian leaders contended that NATO had given the impression that it could concede to
Russian demands in its relations with aspiring alliance members. Several Central and Eastern
European allies also expressed concern about a reported lack of NATO contingency planning in
response to the possibility of future Russian action against a NATO ally or partner.
More recently, Russian leaders have taken aim at NATO and U.S. plans for a ground-based
missile defense system in Europe and NATO insistence that the alliance will not recognize a
Russian sphere of influence along its borders. Moscow has criticized NATO member states for
their refusal to recognize the Russian-encouraged independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia
and for their reluctance to establish alliance relations with the Russian-led Collective Security
Treaty Organization (CSTO members include Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan). In 2007, Russia suspended compliance with the Treaty on
Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (CFE Treaty); it has vocally opposed proposals to enhance
NATO ties with Georgia and Ukraine; and Russian officials have said the country would develop
offensive nuclear forces if the two sides were not to agree to a framework for cooperation on
missile defense. Finally, Russian proposals for an alternative European security architecture have
been viewed by many as an attempt to undermine NATO and to increase Russian influence in
European affairs. Moscow has also been critical of those who have suggested a more formal role
for NATO in European energy security issues.
The allies have consistently sought to assure Moscow that NATO does not pose a security threat
to Russia. NATO leaders emphasize the two sides’ shared interests and have pushed to make these
interests the basis for enhanced cooperation. Since resuming meetings of the NATO-Russia
Council in April 2009, NATO and Russia have developed a Joint Review of 21st Century Security
Challenges, intended to serve as a platform for future cooperation. The shared assessment was
formally adopted by NATO Heads of State and then-President Medvedev at an NRC meeting at
NATO’s November 2010 summit in Lisbon. Common security challenges identified include
ongoing instability in Afghanistan; terrorism; the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction;
piracy; and natural and man-made disasters. In Lisbon, NATO and Russia pledged to pursue
formal cooperation on missile defense, to support the Afghan government and promote peace and
74 The Czech Republic, Poland, and Hungary joined the alliance in March 1999; Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania,
Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia joined in March 2004.
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stability in the region, to enhance joint counterterrorism efforts, and to jointly combat piracy and
armed robbery at sea, among other things. NATO-Russia cooperation has expanded in some of
these areas, while NRC working groups have made little or no progress in other areas.
Allied officials point to several areas of enhanced NATO-Russia cooperation over the past several
years. Russia has allowed the establishment of air and land supply routes for the NATO mission
in Afghanistan on its territory and has agreed to bolster training for Afghan and regional counter-
narcotics officers. Russian helicopters, operated by civilian crews, also provide transport in
Afghanistan, and the NRC has established a Helicopter Maintenance Trust Fund. The Helicopter
Maintenance Fund, jointly funded by NATO and Russia, provides maintenance and repair support
to the Afghan National Security Forces.
In April 2011, the NRC approved a new Action Plan on Terrorism, designed to improve both
sides’ capabilities to deter, combat, and manage the consequences of terrorist attacks. Joint
activities include exchange of classified information, development of technology to detect
explosive devices, and improved protection of critical infrastructure. In early June 2011, NATO
and Russian fighter aircraft held their first ever joint exercise over Poland and the Black Sea, as
part of the Cooperative Airspace Initiative (CAI), aimed at preventing attacks like those of
September 11, 2001, through coordinated interception of renegade aircraft.75
Observers point out that while progress has been made in the aforementioned areas, disagreement
both within the alliance and between NATO and Russia persists on some core issues. NATO and
Russia’s November 2010 agreement to pursue cooperation on missile defense was seen as a
significant breakthrough and recognized as one of the primary achievements of the Lisbon
Summit. Negotiations have, however, been marked by disagreement and increasingly vocal
Russian opposition to NATO plans (discussed in more detail below). In addition, little, if any,
progress has been made on the issue of Georgia’s territorial integrity and NATO membership
prospects, the unratified CFE Treaty, and Russian calls for more influence within the Euro-
Atlantic security architecture.
NATO’s ongoing efforts to improve ties with Russia appear in line with the Obama
Administration’s stated intention to pursue a path of constructive engagement with Moscow. At
the same time, NATO and U.S. officials stress that they will continue to oppose Russian policies
that they perceive as conflicting with the core values of the alliance. They say, for example, that
NATO will not recognize a Russian sphere of influence outside its borders and will continue to
reject Russia’s recognition of Georgia’s breakaway regions, Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Some
allies continue to express concern that Russia has not changed its fundamental view of NATO as a
security threat and that unresolved issues will continue to plague relations. Officials in Lithuania
and Poland have at times expressed concern that the alliance is not serious about standing up to
Russian behavior it has deemed unacceptable. In this vein, they have urged the United States
Administration to consider the interests and views of all NATO allies as it seeks to improve
relations with Moscow.
75 See NATO, “NATO and Russia Building Trust Through Defense Cooperation,” June 8, 2011, http://www.nato.int/
cps/en/SID-B870F09C-E03D10D0/natolive/news_75197.htm.
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Russia and the European Union76
Attitudes and outlooks on Russia differ considerably among the 27 member states of the
European Union (EU). Accordingly, despite labeling Russia a “strategic partner,” the EU has had
difficulty developing robust common policies and a comprehensive strategic approach to its
eastern neighbor. The governments of some countries, such as Germany, France, and Italy, have
been inclined to an approach based on pragmatism and engagement. They believe that the
maintenance of extensive ties and constructive dialogue is the most effective way to influence
Russia. Supporters of this approach observe that Russian cooperation is important on issues such
as energy, Iran, climate change, and arms control. Countries such as Poland and the Baltic States,
on the other hand, have tended to view Russia more as a potential threat to themselves and their
neighbors. Difficult relations between these countries and Russia are deeply rooted in the
historical experiences of the Soviet domination of Eastern Europe. The United Kingdom has also
had notably difficult relations with Russia in recent years. A partial Polish-Russian
rapprochement in 2010 reportedly diminished some of the sharpness of inter-European divisions
about Russia. Although some bilateral tensions between the two countries remain, Poland’s
approach to Russia appears to have shifted in support of closer cooperation between the EU and
Russia on economic and energy issues.
EU leaders have long expressed concerns about human rights, political pluralism, and rule of law
in Russia, although critics note that the EU’s attempts to influence Russia in such areas have been
largely ineffective. These issues have received increased attention from the EU following
Russia’s December 2011 parliamentary election and March 2012 presidential election. After the
parliamentary vote, EU High Representative Catherine Ashton observed that “reports of
procedural violations, such as lack of media impartiality, lack of separation of party and state, and
the harassments of independent monitoring attempts, are … of serious concern.”77 After the EU-
Russia Summit held on December 15, 2011, European Council President Herman Van Rompuy
reported having an “honest discussion” about concerns related to the election, and welcomed
then-President Medvedev’s response pledging a fair and impartial investigation into reported
problems.78 At the same time, observers noted that trade and visa liberalization comprised the
main themes of the meeting.
Following the March 2012 presidential election, High Representative Ashton released a statement
recognizing the “clear victory” of Vladimir Putin, noting international observers’ reports of
“significant civic engagement in the campaign,” and looking forward to working with the
incoming president and government. The statement also noted international observers’ reports of
shortcomings and irregularities in the election and that voters’ choices were limited, and
encouraged Russia to address the shortcomings.79 Although observers asserted that the June 2012
EU-Russia Summit largely avoided discussion of controversial issues, the EU has expressed its
concerns about the arrest of opposition leaders participating in peaceful demonstrations; the
sentencing of the three female band members who staged an anti-Putin protest; legal
76 Prepared by Derek E. Mix, Analyst in European Affairs.
77 Statement by EU High Representative Catherine Ashton, on the Duma elections in the Russian Federation,
December 6, 2011, http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/126596.pdf.
78 European External Action Service, EU-Russia Summit, Brussels, 15 December 2011, http://www.eeas.eu/russia/
summit_en.htm.
79 Statement by Catherine Ashton…on the presidential elections in Russia on 4 March 2012, http://europa.eu/rapid/
pressReleasesAction.do?reference=MEMO/12/158&format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=en.
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developments affecting the freedom of assembly, expression, and the media, including efforts to
limit internet content; the Magnitskiy investigation; and continued intimidation and impunity in
cases involving human rights advocates, journalists, and lawyers.
Overall, relations between the EU and Russia revolve largely around energy and economics.
Russia supplies the EU with more than one-quarter of its total gas and oil supplies, and some EU
member states are almost completely reliant on Russian energy. As discussed above (see “Russian
Energy Policy”), energy dependence and aggressive Russian energy policies contribute to the
tensions felt by some of the countries of Central and Eastern Europe with regard to Russia. The
EU’s energy dependence on Russia is expected to grow substantially over the next 20 years and
the apparent Russian inclination to use energy supplies as an instrument of foreign policy has
raised concerns about potential vulnerabilities that could arise from this trend. Many officials and
analysts agree on the need for the EU to further diversify its energy supply, but the EU has
struggled to formulate a common strategic energy policy. According to some observers, the
willingness of numerous EU member states to conclude bilateral energy deals with Russia has
served to undermine the prospects of developing a stronger common policy.
To some extent, however, the EU-Russia energy relationship works two ways: while Russia is a
crucial energy supplier for Europe, Europe is also a vital energy market for Russia. In terms of
trade and investment, the EU is an even more important partner for Russia, accounting for nearly
half of Russia’s trade and three-quarters of its foreign direct investment (FDI). Russia, in turn, is
the EU’s third-largest trade partner (behind the United States and China); EU-Russia trade totaled
some €308 billion (approximately $394 billion) in 2011.80
The EU and Russia have been negotiating a new framework agreement to replace the EU-Russia
Partnership and Cooperation Agreement (PCA) that came into force in 1997.81 Under that
agreement, the EU and Russia launched efforts in 2003 to develop a more open and integrated
Common Economic Space (CES) and to establish deeper cooperation on issues such as rule of
law, human rights, research, education, crisis management, and non-proliferation.82 The 2010 EU-
Russia Summit launched a “Partnership for Modernization” in which the EU pledged to help
develop and diversify the Russian economy while encouraging reforms related to governance and
rule of law.83 Some analysts assert that progress on these initiatives appears to have stalled.
A potential irritant in the EU-Russia relationship arose in early September 2012 when the
European Commission launched an investigation into allegations of price fixing by Gazprom in
eight eastern EU member states. The process, which is also examining allegations that Gazprom
has hindered the free flow of gas between EU countries and prevented the diversification of gas
supply, could take years to conclude and could theoretically result in a large fine. Russian
officials have strongly criticized the EU probe and the Kremlin has reportedly been pressuring the
EU for a “friendly settlement” of the issue.84 In addition, in September 2012 EU Trade
80 European Commission, DG Trade, http://ec.europa.eu/trade/creating-opportunities/bilateral-relations/countries/
russia/.
81 The PCA was valid for an initial period of 10 years. Since 2007, it has been renewed on an annual basis.
82 European Union External Action Service, http://eeas.europa.eu/russia/common_spaces/index_en.htm.
83 Council of the European Union, Joint Statement on the Partnership for Modernization, June 1, 2010,
http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/en/er/114747.pdf.
84 Andrew Rettman, “Kremlin backs its dog in EU-Gazprom fight,” EUobserver.com, September 7, 2012,
http://www.euobserver.com/economic/117474.
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Commissioner Karel de Gucht warned Russia that it would face action at the WTO if it did not
open its markets to competition. Although the EU welcomed Russia’s accession to the WTO in
August 2012, de Gucht singled out Russia’s ban on European live animal imports and the
imposition of a fee on imported vehicles as examples that Russia was not moving forward to
apply WTO rules on market liberalization.85
Russia and the Soviet Successor States86
Russia’s July 2008 Foreign Policy Concept and the May 2009 National Security Strategy hail
cooperation within the CIS as “a priority foreign policy direction.” The latter document proclaims
that the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO; composed of CIS members Armenia,
Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan) is “the main interstate
instrument” to combat regional military threats.87 The February 2010 Military Doctrine states that
the priorities of military-political cooperation are Belarus (formally part of a union with Russia),
the CSTO, and the CIS. Despite Russia’s emphasis on interests in the CIS, there has long been
scant progress toward overall CIS integration. Many CIS summit meetings have ended in failure,
with many of the presidents sharply criticizing lack of progress on common concerns and Russian
attempts at domination.
In early October 2011, Prime Minister Putin published an article calling for the creation of a
“Eurasian Union” of Soviet successor states. This “Eurasian Union” would be integrated
economically, politically, and militarily, and would unite the structures and functions of the CIS,
the Union State between Belarus and Russia, and the CSTO, as well as the Common Economic
Space between Russia, Belarus, and Kazakhstan that was inaugurated at the beginning of 2012.
Putin raised the hope that the Soviet successor states would be able to integrate more rapidly than
states forming the EU. The “Eurasian Union” would forge close links with the EU, he argued.
The argument’s strong presumption appears to be that economic and other contacts between
Soviet successor states and the rest of the world (including the EU) would be mediated by Russia.
One Russian critic dismissed the article as campaign rhetoric, arguing that in his past elections,
Putin had attempted to attract the votes of those nostalgic for the Soviet era.88 In late July 2012,
Putin appointed a Russian ultranationalist as his advisor on Eurasian integration.
The CSTO was formed in 2002 with a headquarters in Moscow.89 An airbase at Kant, Kyrgyzstan,
was designated in 2002 to provide support for Central Asian rapid reaction forces, but the base
has housed Russian troops. President Medvedev called in February 2009 for forming a new and
sizeable CSTO rapid reaction force based in Russia, which he claimed would rival NATO.
Uzbekistan raised concerns that the force could be used by Russia to intervene in its internal
affairs, and refused to sign a June 2009 agreement on the formation of the force. Belarus too
85 “EU warns Russia to play by WTO rules or face action,” Reuters, September 7, 2012.
86 Prepared by Jim Nichol, Specialist in Russian and Eurasian Affairs, and Steven Woehrel, Specialist in European
Affairs.
87 The Kremlin. President of Russia. The Foreign Policy Concept of the Russian Federation, July 12, 2008; Russian
Federation Security Council. Russian Federation National Security Strategy Until 2020, May 12, 2009; The Kremlin.
President of Russia. The Military Doctrine of the Russian Federation, February 5, 2010.
88 Vladimir Socor, “Putin’s Eurasian Manifesto Charts Russia’s Return To Great Power Status,” Eurasia Daily
Monitor, October 7, 2011; Pavel Felgenhauer, “Putin Prioritizes Rebuilding the Lost Empire,” Eurasia Daily Monitor,
October 6, 2011.
89 The Collective Security Treaty was signed in 1992 and renewed in 1999.
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balked at signing the agreement until October 2009 (see below). Despite the lack of consensus
within the CSTO, Russia moved forward unilaterally, assigning the 98th Airborne Division and the
31st Airborne Assault Brigade (reportedly 8,000 troops) to the force. The rapid reaction force
ostensibly is to be used to repulse military aggression from outside the CSTO, react to natural
disasters, and to combat terrorist groups, trans-national organized crime, and drug traffickers. The
force may be used outside the CSTO at the aegis of the U.N. The decision to use the rapid
reaction force is made by the presidents of the member-states at the request of one or a group of
member states. At a CSTO summit in December 2011, all the members signed a pledge that no
non-member military bases could be established on their territories unless all members agreed, a
measure that appeared aimed against the United States. They also reportedly agreed on
procedures for intervening in domestic “emergency” situations within a member state at the
behest of the member. Uzbekistan reportedly objected to these procedures, perhaps spurring its
decision to leave the CSTO.90 The worth of the CSTO has been a matter of debate among its
members and others, since it has not been efficacious in protecting borders or halting internal
disorder.
Russian policy toward Belarus has been focused on gaining control of Belarus’s key economic
assets. Moscow forced Belarus to sell the Beltransgaz natural gas firm (which controls the
pipelines and other infrastructure on Belarusian territory) to Russia in 2011 by threatening steep
gas price rises if it did not. Russia cut gas prices to Belarus sharply after the Beltransgaz sale.
Moscow has also manipulated the supply of inexpensive and duty-free Russian crude oil to
Belarusian refineries, which has been a key de facto subsidy to Belarus’s economy. In June 2011,
the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Community offered Belarus a three-year, $3 billion loan to
ameliorate the country’s rapidly deteriorating foreign exchange position. In return Belarus had to
agree to privatize $7.5 billion in state-owned assets. Another loan, from the Russian Sberbank and
the Eurasian Development Bank, required Belarus to put up 35% of the key Belarusian fertilizer
company Belaruskali as collateral.
Belarus, already member of a Russia-led Customs Union, is further integrating its economy with
Russia’s in a regional “Single Economic Space.” On the other hand Belarus has shown
independence from Moscow on some issues, such as refusing to recognize the independence of
Georgia’s breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, despite Russian pressure. Belarus is
a member of the CSTO, but has distanced itself from the CSTO’s rapid reaction force, saying that
Belarus would not deploy its forces outside its borders. In other circumstances, Russian economic
pressure on Belarus could have caused Minsk to seek closer ties with the United States and EU,
as it has in the past. However, relations with the West have been seriously damaged by
Lukashenko’s repression of opposition groups after Belarus’s fraudulent December 2010 election.
Russian forces remain stationed in the breakaway Transnistria region of Moldova against the
wishes of the Moldovan government. Russia has provided economic subsidies to bolster the pro-
Russian regime in Transnistria and Russian firms own key Transnistrian businesses. Russian
leaders have conditioned the withdrawal of their troops on the resolution of Transnistria’s status.
Transnistrian leaders have sought Russia’s recognition of their independence, without success.
Instead, Russian diplomats have proposed that Transnistria remain part of Moldova, but with a
“special status” and on condition that Moldova reaffirm its status as a neutral country (which
would preclude the country from ever joining NATO). Based on its past actions, some experts
90 Interfax, December 21, 2011.
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believe that Russia may seek a status for Transnistria that would give the pro-Russian enclave
effective veto power over Moldova’s foreign and domestic policies. This could stymie Moldovan
efforts toward European integration and pressure Moldova to join Moscow’s own integration
plans. However, both the current reformist, pro-EU Moldovan government and the separatist
Transnistria regime would likely reject such a proposal. President Putin has said no decision can
be made on Transnistria without the support of the people there, which would also seem to make
unlikely Transnistria’s reintegration into Moldova. Therefore, Moscow may remain satisfied with
the status quo, which could also hinder Moldova’s European integration prospects.
Moscow has used the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh to pressure both
sides, maintain Armenia as an ally, and otherwise exercise influence in the South Caucasus
region. The international community condemned Russia’s military incursion into Georgia in early
August 2008 and President Medvedev’s August 26, 2008, decree officially recognizing the
independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Russian officials announced in September 2008
that two army brigades, each consisting of approximately 3,700 troops, would be deployed to new
military bases in Abkhazia and South Ossetia (the brigades were reduced to a reported 1,700-
1,800 troops each in mid-2009). A part of the Black Sea Fleet also was deployed to Ochamchire
in Abkhazia. The United States and others in the international community have called for Russia
to reverse these deployments and rescind the recognitions of independence. Russia and Georgia
have yet to reestablish diplomatic relations that Georgia broke off following the August 2008
conflict. In 2011, Switzerland mediated talks between Georgia and Russia to address Georgia’s
calls for customs control along its borders between Russia and the breakaway regions, as a
condition for Georgia’s consent for Russia’s joining the World Trade Organization. Then-
President Medvedev stated in November 2011 that Russia would accept some private third-party
monitoring of the border and electronic data on trade, resolving this issue blocking WTO
accession.
Citing instability and the threatened spread of Islamic extremism on its southern flank as a threat
to its security, Moscow intervened in Tajikistan’s civil war in 1992-1996 against Tajik rebels.
Russia’s policy of trying to exclude U.S. influence from Central Asia as much as possible was
temporarily reversed by President Putin after the September 11, 2001, attacks, but appeared to be
put back in place as the 2000s progressed. In July 2005, the Uzbek government directed the
United States to cease its operations at the Karshi-Khanabad (K2) airbase within six months.
Tashkent is believed to have acted not only in response to Russian and Chinese urging but also
after the United States criticized the Uzbek government’s repression in Andijon in May 2005. In
February 2009, Kyrgyzstan accepted a large loan proffered by Russia and simultaneously
requested that the United States wind up operations at the Manas airbase by August 2009. After
intense U.S.-Kyrgyz talks, Kyrgyzstan reversed course in late June 2009 and agreed to permit
U.S. and NATO cargoes to transit through Manas, reportedly angering Putin.91 In the wake of the
“reset” in U.S.-Russia relations since 2009, however, there has appeared to be some cooperation
from Russia regarding the transit of materiel and the provision of other assistance to support U.S.
and NATO military operations in Afghanistan and the continued—although Russia has insisted,
temporary—presence of U.S. and NATO bases in Central Asia.
91 For more on Russian policy in these regions, see CRS Report RL33453, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia: Political
Developments and Implications for U.S. Interests, and CRS Report RL33458, Central Asia: Regional Developments
and Implications for U.S. Interests, all by Jim Nichol.
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Relations between Russia and Ukraine have improved since pro-Russian Viktor Yanukovych
became President of Ukraine in 2010. Yanukovych renounced the NATO membership aspirations
of the previous government, saying that the country will remain outside all military blocs. Russia
and Ukraine agreed to extend the stay of the Russian Black Sea Fleet in Crimea until 2042. In
exchange, Russia agreed to provide Ukraine with discounted prices for natural gas supplies for 10
years, a benefit that the two sides estimated as worth $40 billion. However, rising global energy
prices negated much of the savings Kyiv counted on from the accord, and Yanukovych continues
to seek further gas price reductions from Russia. This situation may give Moscow more leverage
to secure additional foreign policy and economic concessions from Kyiv. Russian firms, with
Russian government support, have sought to buy key industrial assets in Ukraine during
Yanukovych’s presidency.
Some of Russia’s boldest proposals appear to have gone further than Kyiv can support. Ukraine
has rebuffed Russian suggestions that it join the CSTO. It has not accepted Russia’s proposal that
that it join the Customs Union with Russia, Belarus and other former Soviet countries, which
would conflict with a planned free trade agreement with the European Union. However, the EU
has put off signing the free trade accord with Kyiv (and the association agreement of which it is a
part) until Ukraine’s parliamentary elections in October 2012 at the earliest, due to the
imprisonment of key Ukrainian opposition leader Yuliya Tymoshenko and others. Moscow hopes
that the EU’s delay will persuade Ukraine to change its mind and join the Customs Union and
other Russian-led integration plans instead. In August 2012, Ukraine joined a CIS free trade pact.
U.S.-Russia Relations
The spirit of U.S.-Russian “strategic partnership” of the early 1990s was replaced by increasing
tension and mutual recrimination in succeeding years. In the aftermath of the September 11, 2001,
attacks, the two nations reshaped their relationship on the basis of cooperation against terrorism
and Putin’s goal of integrating Russia economically with the West.92 However, tensions soon
increased on a number of issues that contributed to ever-growing discord in U.S.-Russian
relations. Cooperation continued in some areas, and then-Presidents Bush and Putin strove to
maintain at least the appearance of cordial personal relations. In the wake of the August 2008
Russia-Georgia conflict, however, bilateral ties deteriorated to their lowest point since the Cold
War.
The Obama Administration “Re-sets” Bilateral Relations
The Obama Administration called for starting a dialogue with Russia from a fresh slate. A
February 2009 speech in Munich by Vice President Biden to “re-set” U.S.-Russian relations was
an early sign of the President’s intentions. At their first “get acquainted” meeting on April 1,
2009, in London, President Obama and then-President Medvedev issued two joint statements on
opening nuclear weapons talks and on U.S.-Russia relations.
In their joint statement on U.S.-Russia relations, the two presidents agreed to “deepen cooperation
to combat nuclear terrorism” and to “support international negotiations for a verifiable treaty to
92 For the change in Russian policy toward integration with the West and cooperation with the United States, see CRS
Report RL31543, Russian National Security Policy After September 11, by Stuart D. Goldman.
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end the production of fissile materials for nuclear weapons.” President Obama confirmed his
commitment to work for U.S. Senate ratification of the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.
Both sides also pledged to bring into force the bilateral Agreement for Cooperation in the Field of
Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy, which former President Bush had withdrawn from
consideration in the U.S. Senate following the August 2008 Russia-Georgia conflict. Russia
agreed to assist the United States and the international community in responding to terrorism and
the insurgency in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and to drug trafficking from Afghanistan. The two
sides called for the continuation of the Six-Party Talks and for the verifiable denuclearization of
the Korean Peninsula. They also pledged to strengthen Euro-Atlantic and European security,
including through the OSCE and NATO-Russia Council.93
Reflective of Russia’s views of the bilateral relationship, its May 2009 National Security Strategy
states that Moscow strives to establish “an equal and full-fledged strategic partnership” with the
United States. The Strategy claims that the two countries have “key” influence in the world and
should work together on arms control, on confidence-building measures, on the nonproliferation
of weapons of mass destruction, on counterterrorism, and on the settlement of regional conflicts.
The Strategy proclaims that Russia will work to maintain parity with the United States in strategic
offensive weapons even if the United States deploys a global missile defense system.94
At the July 2009 summit in Moscow, President Obama stated that “the relationship between
Russia and the United States has suffered from a sense of drift” in recent years, and that the two
presidents had “resolved to re-set U.S.-Russian relations.” He stressed that the United States
wanted “to deal as equals” with Russia, since both countries are nuclear superpowers, and that the
United States has recognized that its role “is not to dictate policy around the world, but to be a
partner with other countries” to solve global problems. Some observers have argued that these
statements were aimed at assuaging Russian sensitivities about the country’s status in the world.
Russia’s hyperbole about its role in the world, these observers have suggested, was evidenced by
then-President Medvedev’s statement at the summit that the United States and Russia are
“powerful states [that] have special responsibility for everything that is happening on our planet,”
and that strengthened bilateral cooperation “will ensure international peace and security.”
According to Michael McFaul, the then-Senior Director for Russian and Eurasian Affairs on the
National Security Council, the main topics at the summit were Iran, a major U.S. concern, and
missile defense, a major Russian concern. President Obama stated that one area where the two
presidents “agreed to disagree” was on Georgia. McFaul reported that President Obama stated
that the United States would not recognize South Ossetia and Abkhazia as independent states and
also argued that the Russian idea of a “sphere of influence” in the Soviet successor states does not
belong in the 21st century.
One achievement of the summit was the establishment of a U.S.-Russia Bilateral Presidential
Commission intended to strengthen consultations and diplomacy. President Obama highlighted
the commission as the “foundation” element in re-setting relations, since it would greatly expand
communications between the two countries. The presidents are the co-chairs, and the Secretary of
State and the Foreign Minister coordinate meetings.
93 The White House. Office of the Press Secretary, Remarks By President Obama and Russian President Medvedev
after Meeting, April 1, 2009.
94 Russian Federation Security Council. Russian Federation National Security Strategy Until 2020, May 12, 2009.
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Secretary of State Hillary Clinton reported that her visit to Russia on October 12-14, 2009, had
resulted in progress in negotiations to replace the expiring Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty
(START), support for the Global Initiative To Combat Nuclear Terrorism, and cooperation in
Afghanistan. Discussions about Iran’s nuclear proliferation threat revealed ongoing differences.
Meeting with Russian human rights advocates, Secretary Clinton argued that the United States
would continue to advocate democratization and respect for human rights in Russia.
During her visit, Secretary Clinton and Foreign Minister Lavrov convened the first meeting of the
U.S.-Russia Bilateral Presidential Commission. Several of the co-chairs of working groups
attached to the commission also met. McFaul, who co-chaired the civil society working group,
reportedly stated that government officials and representatives of non-governmental groups
would meet separately. Some Russian human rights groups criticized their exclusion from the
working group. Ahead of Secretary Clinton’s trip, some co-chair meetings already had taken
place, including the anti-narcotics trafficking working group in Washington, DC, in late
September. At this meeting, Russia urged the United States to greatly step up poppy eradication
efforts in Afghanistan.
Meeting on November 15, 2009, on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific summit in Singapore,
President Obama and then-President Medvedev continued discussions on START and Iran.
President Obama reported that he had again stressed to Medvedev that added international
sanctions should be applied to Iran if it continued to defy its international obligation not to
develop nuclear weapons.
The Obama Administration’s National Security Strategy, released in May 2010, asserts that the
United States endeavors “to build a stable, substantive, multidimensional relationship with
Russia, based on mutual interests. The United States has an interest in a strong, peaceful, and
prosperous Russia that respects international norms.” The strategy calls for bilateral cooperation
with Russia—termed one of the 21st century centers of influence in the world—in bolstering
global nonproliferation; in confronting violent extremism, especially in Afghanistan; in forging
new trade and investment arrangements; in promoting the rule of law, accountable government,
and universal values within Russia; and in cooperating as a partner in Europe and Asia. At the
same time, the strategy stresses that the United States “will support the sovereignty and territorial
integrity of Russia’s neighbors.”95
Then-President Medvedev visited the United States on June 22-24, 2010, to focus on business and
technology ties between the two countries. In 11 joint statements, the two presidents pledged
further cooperation to achieve stability in Afghanistan, to foster open government, and to
strengthen counter-terrorism cooperation, among other issues. In a joint statement on strategic
stability, they vowed to continue “the development of a new strategic relationship based on
mutual trust, openness, predictability, and cooperation.” President Obama also called for
accelerating efforts with other members of the WTO to complete the steps necessary for Russian
accession to the WTO. He announced that Russia had agreed to purchase 50 Boeing aircraft,
worth $4 billion, and that the two countries had reached an agreement that would permit U.S.
poultry products to again be exported to Russia.96
95 The White House. National Security Strategy, May 2010.
96 The White House. Office of the Press Secretary. U.S.-Russia Joint Statements, June 24, 2010; Remarks by President
Obama and President Medvedev of Russia at Joint Press Conference, June 24, 2010.
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Just days after Medvedev’s U.S. visit, the United States announced on June 28, 2010, the arrest of
11 Russian spies (one spy was outside the United States and apparently escaped). Some of the
spies had been paired as couples by the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service. The spies had lived
in several U.S. metropolitan areas for up to 10 years or longer. They were arrested on charges that
included money-laundering and not registering as foreign agents. An FBI investigation against the
“deep cover” agents reportedly had been ongoing for several years. The timing of the arrests may
have been determined by suspicions of one of the agents that her cover had been blown. The 10
agents were swapped in Vienna, Austria, on July 9 for 4 Russian citizens whom Moscow had
alleged were U.S. or British spies. Some U.S. observers suggested that the focus of the 10
Russian agents on seemingly public information gathering was a reflection of the paranoia and
myopia of Russia’s political leaders.97 Some observers in the United States and Russia speculated
that the quick resolution of the spy case indicated a concerted effort among policymakers in both
countries to preserve the “re-set” in bilateral relations.
In November 2010, Presidents Obama and Medvedev met on the sidelines at the Group of 20
industrialized states in Seoul, South Korea, at the Asia-Pacific Economic Summit in Yokohama,
Japan, and at the NATO-Russia summit in Lisbon, Portugal. At the session of the NATO-Russia
Council in Lisbon, the heads of state agreed to work on cooperation on common security
challenges, to resume theater ballistic missile defense exercises, to identify opportunities for
Russia to cooperate with NATO’s new territorial missile defense capability, to expand Russia’s
support for NATO operations in Afghanistan, and to explore revitalizing and modernizing the
Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) Treaty. President Obama hailed the agreements as part of
the “reset” in NATO-Russia relations and as indicating that Russia is a partner rather than an
adversary of NATO. The 112th Congress may hold oversight hearings on all of these issues.
In early December 2010, Secretary Clinton attended the OSCE Summit in Astana, Kazakhstan.
On the one hand, Russia and the United States reportedly clashed, with Russia objecting to the
establishment of an OSCE mission in Georgia that would have a mandate that included Georgia’s
breakaway Abkhazia and South Ossetia and the United States objecting to Russian calls for a new
European security treaty. Secretary Clinton also stressed that all OSCE members should fully
implement their pledges to democratize and respect human rights. On the other hand, President
Medvedev and Secretary Clinton joined in calling for the peaceful settlement of the Armenia-
Azerbaijan conflict over the breakaway Nagorno Karabakh region, and the Astana summit
declaration called for opening negotiations in 2011 on revitalizing the CFE Treaty.
In May 2011, President Obama and then-President Medvedev met on the sidelines at the Group of
8 industrialized states in Deauville, France. The main topics discussed included U.S. plans for
missile defense deployments in Central Europe, counter-terrorism cooperation, and economic
issues, including Russia’s efforts to obtain entry into the WTO. President Medvedev indicated
that Russia would continue discussions about its concerns over NATO missile defense plans, but
stated that there was no breakthrough at the talks and suggested that progress might have to be
deferred to 2020 (the final phase of missile deployments) and to “other politicians.” Seemingly in
contrast, then-National Security Council official Michael McFaul asserted that there was progress
in discussing cooperation on missile defense. McFaul stated that a major part of the discussion of
WTO was concerned with Georgia’s concerns. The two presidents also discussed the “Arab
Spring,” Iran’s nuclear program, and NATO actions in Libya. In regard to the latter issue, McFaul
indicated that the views of the two presidents did not widely diverge, and Deputy National
97 Financial Times (London), July 1, 2010.
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Security Advisor Ben Rhodes stated that President Obama agreed to consult with the Russians
about events in Libya.
The two sides signed or issued nine agreements, statements, memoranda of understanding (MoU),
and reports, including a protocol of cooperation on the global eradication of polio; statements of
cooperation on visa issues, on counter-terrorism, and on the Bering Strait Region; memoranda of
understanding on cooperation on civil aviation security, on “smart grid” energy, and on medical
research; and reports on the progress of the U.S.-Russia Presidential Commission and on
assessing future missile challenges (the presidents stated that the latter report had been finalized,
but it was not released). It also was announced that two new working groups had been created at
part of the Bilateral Presidential Commission, a working group on innovation and a working
group on the rule of law. The former group is headed by the U.S. Under Secretary of State and a
Russian presidential advisor and the latter group is headed by the Russian Justice Minister and the
U.S. Attorney General. According to McFaul, a major goal of the working group on innovation is
to assist in Medvedev’s modernization campaign, including investment at the Skolkovo Center
(see below), and a major goal of the working group on the rule of law is to strengthen legal
institutions in Russia to facilitate investment.98
Secretary Clinton and Foreign Minister Lavrov met in Washington, DC, on July 13, 2011. They
signed a long-anticipated adoptions agreement and a protocol to extend research on the effects of
radiation. In addition, they announced an agreement on visa liberalization and on a new Air
Navigation Services agreement. Secretary Clinton and Foreign Minister Lavrov also reviewed
cooperation under the Presidential Commission and exchanged diplomatic notes to bring into
force the U.S.-Russian Plutonium Management and Disposition Agreement.
In testimony to Congress at the end of January 2012 on worldwide threats, Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper assessed that then-Prime Minister Putin’s likely (re)-election to the
presidency would result in “more continuity than change” in Russian foreign and domestic policy
over the next year. Putin likely would not reverse the course of U.S.-Russia relations, but
relations could prove more “challenging.” According to his assessment, Putin views U.S.-Russia
relations established under the Obama Administration’s “reset” policy as having advantages for
Russia, although Putin harbors an “instinctive distrust of U.S. intentions,” and tends to view the
continuation of the relationship as dependent on U.S. concessions. Russia is neither likely to
support added sanctions on Iran nor to be cooperative in resolving the growing government
violence in Syria, Clapper estimated. Russia’s concerns about U.S. and NATO plans for European
missile defense will reinforce Russia’s reluctance to embrace further nuclear arms reductions.
Russia is a major cyber threat that is involved in intrusions and theft of U.S. intellectual property,
and otherwise is aggressive in economic espionage against the United States. In the domestic
realm, Putin is unlikely to be a reformer or liberalizer, but will rather probably focus on “securing
new opportunities for elite enrichment.” He may need to “manage” rising discontent “which
might prove increasingly difficult,” if Russia’s economy only grows moderately. Director Clapper
also raised concerns about “pervasive [governmental] corruption augmented by powerful criminal
organizations.” These Russian organized crime groups are increasingly allied with leading
98 The White House, Office of the Press Secretary, Remarks by President Obama and President Medvedev of Russia
after Bilateral Meeting in Deauville, France, May 26, 2011; Fact Sheet: U.S.-Russia Agreements and Joint Statements,
May 26, 2011; Press Briefing by National Security Council Senior Director for Russia and Eurasia McFaul and
Deputy National Security Advisor Rhodes, May 26, 2011.
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businessmen (the so-called oligarchs), and are used by the government to undermine international
free market competition in gas, oil, aluminum, and precious metals markets, he warned.99
President Obama and lame duck President Medvedev met on the sidelines of the nuclear security
summit in Seoul, South Korea, on March 26, 2012. Both presidents mentioned tensions in
relations, including on missile defense, but both also stressed the accomplishments of the “reset”
in relations, such as the START Treaty, Russia’s imminent accession to the WTO, and other
initiatives undertaken by the Bi-national Presidential Commission. President Obama indicated
that the two sides were cooperating on several foreign policy issues, such as support (at that time)
for Kofi Annan’s peace efforts in Syria, efforts to convince North Korea not a launch a missile,
and talks with Iran over its nuclear program.100
President-elect Putin met with U.S. National Security Advisor Thomas Danilon on May 4, 2012,
and reportedly conveyed that constructive dialogue between the two countries would continue.
Although he cancelled plans to attend the G-8 meeting at Camp David, he detailed Medvedev to
attend.
At the most recent U.S.-Russia presidential summit on June 18, 2012, on the sidelines of the G-20
(Group of twenty major developed and developing countries) summit in Los Cabos, Mexico,
Presidents Obama and Putin reaffirmed that they would continue to cooperate on many issues,
and they issued a long joint statement listing areas of existing and proposed cooperation,
including on Afghanistan, bilateral investment and trade, health, the environment, and educational
and cultural exchanges.101 However, it has appeared that the activities of the many Working
Groups and Sub-Working Groups have fallen off somewhat, perhaps related to the electoral
cycles in both countries, and on the Russian side, to the anti-Americanism that was a leitmotif of
Putin’s presidential campaign. Ironically, in a foreign policy speech in early July 2012, President
Putin claimed that the U.S. presidential election is contributing to temporary anti-Russian rhetoric
in the United States, including such themes as missile defense advocacy and efforts by Congress
to pass “anti-Russian” laws, apparently in reference to the Magnitskiy Act.102
Bilateral Relations and Afghanistan
In a meeting with Afghan President Hamid Karzai in August 2008, Russian President Medvedev
called for “opening a new page in relations” between the two countries, “because, unfortunately,
our countries are coming up against similar threats and problems.” Russia provides some foreign
assistance and investment to Afghanistan, although it has rejected sending military forces. Russia
hosted a Shanghai Cooperation Organization conference on Afghanistan, counter-terrorism, and
counter-narcotics in late March 2009, which was attended by U.S. and NATO observers. The
conference communiqué praised the efforts of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF)
99 U.S. Senate, Select Committee on Intelligence, Statement for the Record on the Worldwide Threat Assessment of the
US Intelligence Community, James R. Clapper, Director of National Intelligence, January 31, 2012.
100 The White House, Office of the Press Secretary, Remarks by President Obama and President Medvedev of Russia
After Bilateral Meeting, March 26, 2012.
101 The White House, Office of the Spokesperson, Fact Sheet: The United States and Russia: A Multifaceted
Relationship, June 18, 2012.
102 The Kremlin, President of the Russian Federation, Meeting with Russian Ambassadors and Permanent
Representatives in International Organizations, July 9, 2012. During Russia’s Presidential election campaign in early
2012, anti-American rhetoric was prominent.
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in Afghanistan but offered no substantive assistance. At the July 2009 U.S.-Russia summit, a joint
statement on assistance to Afghanistan called for enhancing cooperation within the U.S.-Russia
Counter-Terrorism Working Group (established in 2000); further implementing the Russia-NATO
Council’s counter-narcotics project; supporting Afghanistan-related activities of the OSCE;
increasing training for the Afghan National Army, police, and counter-narcotics personnel; and
greatly increasing cooperation to halt illicit financial flows related to heroin trafficking in
Afghanistan. The two sides also called for enhancing counter-terrorism cooperation between
Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Russia’s then-permanent representative to NATO, Dmitriy Rogozin, and Moscow Regional
Governor Boris Gromov (the former commander of Soviet forces in Afghanistan) called in
January 2010 for NATO forces not to “withdraw without victory” in Afghanistan. They asserted
that the “Russian position” is that NATO should ensure political stability in Afghanistan and
claimed that Russia is forming the CSTO’s rapid reaction forces to protect Central Asia as a
hedge against NATO’s failure in Afghanistan. In late March 2010, Rogozin suggested that Russia
should link its cooperation as a transit state for supply shipments to Afghanistan (see below) to a
NATO pledge to combat drug trafficking into Russia. Seeking to elevate its status, the CSTO has
repeatedly called for NATO to formally cooperate with it in order to stanch drug trafficking from
Afghanistan and to defeat the Taliban.103
Russia’s reaction to NATO’s announcement in late 2010 of a planned drawdown of ISAF by the
end of 2014 appeared complex. On the one hand, Russia welcomed a lessened U.S. presence in
Afghanistan and Central Asia, but on the other was concerned about regional security during and
after the drawdown. In January 2011, Russia’s ambassador to Afghanistan, Andrey Avetisyan,
stressed that NATO forces should not leave Afghanistan until the country is able to defend itself.
He stated that Russia was ready to assist Afghanistan in rebuilding infrastructure and facilities
that had been constructed by the former Soviet Union, but that such rebuilding would need
international financing. He also renewed Russia’s call for NATO to combat drug production. He
also dismissed what he claimed were U.S. arguments that combating poppy growing in
Afghanistan was complicated because it risked antagonizing farmers, stating that “the money
made on the production of drugs … finances the militants … and part of the Afghan heroin also
goes to Europe and the United States.”104
In December 2011, Rogozin argued at a NATO-Russia Council meeting that Russia should link
its cooperation with NATO in Afghanistan to NATO granting Russia a larger role in decision-
making on the future of Afghanistan after the planned NATO drawdown of troops in 2014. Also
in December, the CSTO presented a plan to the presidents of the member states for defending
common borders with Afghanistan after the planned NATO drawdown.
At the June 2012 June 2012 Obama-Putin summit, the joint statement acknowledged Russia’s
“significant contribution” to promote stability in Afghanistan, but only touched on areas of
existing and future cooperation, including the NDN, counter-terrorism, and counter-narcotics. A
fact sheet issued by the State Department praised the work of the NATO-Russia Council
counternarcotics program, which has trained more than 2,000 law-enforcement officers from
103 ITAR-TASS, January 18, 2010; Boris Gromov and Dmitry Rogozin, “Russian Advice on Afghanistan,” The
International Herald Tribune, January 12, 2010; BBC Worldwide Monitoring, March 31, 2010; “NATO Not
Cooperating Sufficiently with Russia—CSTO Head,” RIA Novosti, March 27, 2010.
104 Interfax, January 27, 2011.
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Central Asia, Afghanistan, and Pakistan since 2006. The fact sheet also highlighted Russia-NATO
cooperation in setting up the Helicopter Maintenance Trust Fund to support Afghanistan’s fleet of
Russian-built platforms. Russian cooperation has included training Afghan maintenance
personnel.105
Alternative Supply Routes to Afghanistan
In late 2008, the United States and NATO stepped up efforts to develop supplemental air and land
routes into Afghanistan because of growing problems in sending supplies through Pakistan. The
incoming Obama Administration also planned increasing the number of troops in Afghanistan,
which also spurred the search for alternate supply routes. A “northern supply network” was
envisaged for transits through Russia or the South Caucasus to Central Asia and then to
Afghanistan. The U.S. Manas airbase in Kyrgyzstan, established in late 2001, was to be a
component of this route. In February 2009, however, Kyrgyzstan announced that it intended to
close the airbase, but an agreement was reached in late June 2009 to keep it open in exchange for
higher U.S. rent and other payments.
As early as the April 2008 NATO summit, Russia’s then-President Putin had offered to permit the
shipment of non-lethal NATO goods through Russia to Afghanistan. In late 2008, Russia also
permitted Germany to ship weapons and other equipment by land to its troops in Afghanistan.
NATO reached agreement with Russia in February 2009 on the land transit of non-lethal supplies
to Afghanistan, and all the Central Asian states except neutral Turkmenistan also agreed to permit
overland shipments. The first railway shipment from the Baltic states reached Afghanistan—after
transiting Russia, Kazakhstan, and Uzbekistan—in late March 2009.
At the U.S.-Russia summit meeting in early July 2009, Foreign Minister Lavrov and Under
Secretary of State Burns signed an agreement allowing up to 4,500 annual official air flights of
troops and lethal supplies through Russia to Afghanistan, and unlimited numbers of commercial
charter flights of nonlethal supplies. Lauded by McFaul as “historic,” the agreement complements
the NATO-Russia arrangement reached in early 2009 on land transit. The Administration reported
that air transit through Russia could save the United States government up to $133 million
annually in fuel, maintenance and other transportation costs, and that this agreement would be
free of any air navigation charges.
Reportedly, the first flight by the United States using this route took place in early October 2009,
and another took place in November 2009. Allegedly, Russia was slow in facilitating such flights,
and the United States and NATO used alternative air transit through the Caspian region to reach
Afghanistan. According to Assistant Secretary of State Philip Gordon, these air transit problems
soon were resolved.106 A factsheet issued at the June 2012 U.S.-Russia summit stated that 2,200
U.S. official flights over Russia had carried over 379,000 military personnel and over 45,000
cargo containers. At the summit, President Obama reported that he had thanked Putin for Russia’s
cooperation in the NDN, and the two sides pledged to strengthen the NDN.
A June 2010 Administration factsheet on the results of the “re-set” gave some information on
Russian commercial support for the Afghan conflict. It stated that Russian companies had made
105 U.S. Department of State, Fact Sheet: U.S.-Russia Cooperation on Afghanistan, June 18, 2012.
106 U.S. Department of State. U.S.-Russia Relations Under the Obama Administration: Remarks at the German
Marshall Fund, June 16, 2010.
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over 12,000 flights in support of U.S. operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, had supplied over 30%
of the fuel U.S. military troops use in Afghanistan, and provided over 80 MI-17 helicopters to the
Afghan National Army, Afghan National Police, and Afghan Drug Interdiction Forces.107
Russia is a substantial supplier of jet fuel for U.S. and NATO operations in Afghanistan. This
relationship became more apparent in September 2011 when the US Defense Logistics Agency
placed its first order for fuel with the Gazpromneft-Aero-Kyrgyzstan joint venture, which is
majority-owned by Russia’s Gazprom state-controlled gas firm, to supply aviation fuel to the
Manas Transit Center in Kyrgyzstan. The Transit Center is the main U.S. airbase in Central Asia,
and provides major aerial refueling services over northern Afghanistan. According to one report,
the fuel is directly supplied from Gazprom’s oil refineries and transported by the Russian Transoil
company to the transit center.108
In early February 2012, Russian media reported that NATO and Russia had agreed that cargo
aircraft bringing materials out of Afghanistan could land at the Ulyanovsk airport, north of the
Caspian Sea. From there, the materials would transit by railway to Riga or Tallinn. Russian planes
reportedly would haul some of the cargoes. Such flights circumvent road and railway transit
delays in Central Asia, according to some reports.109 At a military meeting in early August 2012,
President Putin stated that Russia had an interest in peace and stability “on our southern borders”
(apparently including Central Asia as part of Russia), so would assist NATO forces in
Afghanistan, including by opening the Ulyanovsk airport to NATO transport. He averred that it
was better for Russia to support NATO than to have to mobilize Russian troops to deal with
insecurity emanating from Afghanistan.110
In May 2012, a Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman hailed a statement by the Kyrgyz president
that the country did not plan to renew the lease on the U.S. military facility at Manas. The
spokesman stated that Russia’s position was that the airbase would not be needed after the United
States withdraws most of its troops by the end of 2014.
Bilateral Relations and Iran
Russian perceptions of the Iranian nuclear threat and its policies toward Iran are driven by a
number of different and sometimes competing factors. Russia signed an agreement to build a
nuclear power plant outside the Iranian town of Bushehr and provide other assistance for Iran’s
civilian nuclear program in January 1995. Although the White House and Congress long warned
that Iran would use the civilian nuclear reactor program as a cover for a clandestine nuclear
weapons program, Russia refused to cancel the project. Moscow maintains that its cooperation
with Iran’s civilian nuclear program is legal, proper, and poses no proliferation threat, arguing
that Iran is a signatory of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), and that the light water
reactor built by Russia is not well-suited for producing weapons-grade fissionable material.
Russia agrees with the United States and many other nations that a nuclear-armed Iran would be
destabilizing and undesirable. After Iran’s clandestine program to master the entire nuclear cycle,
107 The White House. Office of the Press Secretary. U.S.-Russia Relations: “Re-set” Fact Sheet, June 24, 2010.
108 CEDR, September 28, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-950073.
109 Interfax, February 3, 2012.
110 Interfax, August 2, 2012.
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including uranium reprocessing, was revealed, Russia withheld delivery of nuclear fuel for the
Bushehr reactor, pending agreement with Tehran about return of spent fuel to Russia for
reprocessing. Russia joined the United States and the “EU-3” group (Great Britain, France, and
Germany) in approving a series of limited U.N. Security Council (UNSC) sanctions related to
Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, including asset freezes and trade bans targeting certain Iranian
entities and individuals.111 Moscow temporarily withdrew most of its technicians and scientists
from the unfinished Bushehr reactor in 2007. However, Russia soon resumed construction and
shipment of nuclear fuel to Bushehr. Fuel delivery was completed in early 2008. In early 2011,
Russia’s permanent representative to NATO alleged that a computer virus had delayed the start-
up of the reactor.112 Reportedly, some damaged systems had to be replaced, but Russian officials
announced that the reactor had begun operation on May 8, 2011. The plant began supplying
power for the electric grid in September 2011. Russia plans to hand over operations of the power
station to Iran by the end of 2012. However, Russia has viewed the Iranian operators as needing
extra training, so is negotiating an addition three-year advisory contract.
In September 2009, Iran informed the IAEA that it had been building a second uranium
enrichment plant near the city of Qom. Many observers considered the disclosure further
evidence that Iran intended to build nuclear weapons. A few days later, President Obama reported
that a meeting he held with then-President Medvedev on the sidelines of a U.N. General
Assembly session dealt mostly with Iran. Medvedev stated that the international “task is to create
... a system of incentives that would allow Iran to continue its fissile nuclear program, but at the
same time prevent it from obtaining nuclear weapons.”113 In a meeting with concerned nations on
October 1, 2009 (now termed the Sextet or P5+1, consisting of the United States, United
Kingdom, France, Russia, China, and Germany), Iran agreed to a late October IAEA inspection of
the Qom enrichment site and initially appeared positive toward a plan to export most of its low-
enriched uranium to Russia or France to be further enriched to fuel the Tehran Research Reactor.
After inspecting the enrichment plant near Qom, the IAEA concluded that it was in an advanced
stage of completion and that Iran’s efforts to hide it for years heightened IAEA concerns that
other nuclear facilities were being hidden. Russia reportedly mediated with Iran to urge it to
accept the research reactor fuel deal, but Iran rejected the deal. In late November, Russia joined
other representatives of the IAEA in censuring Iran for concealing the enrichment plant near
Qom. In February 2010, Iran announced that it would start enriching uranium to 20% to fuel the
Tehran Research Reactor.
In June 2010, Russia supported the approval of UNSC Resolution 1929, which expressed
growing international concern with Iran’s lack of compliance with ensuring that its nuclear
program is peaceful and directed an expanded international arms embargo and added restrictions
on commerce dealing with “proliferation-sensitive activities” in Iran. Explaining Russia’s vote for
the resolution, U.N. ambassador Vitaliy Churkin stated that “it has become inevitable that
additional restrictive measures should be adopted to constrain development in those Iranian
activities that run counter to the task of strengthening the non-proliferation regime.”114 Perhaps
also a significant factor, simultaneously with Russia’s agreement on the draft resolution, its state
arms export agency, Rosoboronexport, and other Russian firms were removed from U.S. lists of
111 See CRS Report RL32048, Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses, by Kenneth Katzman.
112 Interfax, January 27, 2011.
113 The White House. Office of the Press Secretary. Remarks by President Obama and President Medvedev of Russia
after Bilateral Meeting, September 23, 2009.
114 United Nations. Security Council. 6335th Meeting, Meeting Record, S/PV.6335, June 9, 2010.
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sanctioned entities.115 Appearing to be one strategy to deflect Iran’s anger, Russia has denounced
added sanctions imposed by the United States, the EU, and other countries in the wake of the
approval of UNSC Resolution 1929.
After CIA revelations about Iran’s possession of highly enriched uranium, then-President
Medvedev concurred in July 2010 that “Iran is nearing the possession of the potential which in
principle could be used for the creation of a nuclear weapon.” He also stated that “we should not
forget that Iran’s attitude [toward cooperation with the international community] is not the best
one.”116 Causing further strains in Russian-Iranian relations, in September 2010 President
Medvedev signed a decree banning the supply of the S-300 surface-to-air missile system to Iran,
asserting that the weapons transfer to Iran was blocked by UNSC Resolution 1929. In April 2012,
Iran sued Russia’s Rosoboronexport, its state-owned arms export firm, in the international
arbitration court in Geneva for non-fulfillment of the contract, further straining relations.
Lavrov reported that in November 2010, he urged the Sextet to back a “step-by-step” approach to
resolving tensions over Iran’s nuclear program, involving easing and eventually eliminating
UNSC sanctions in response to Iranian moves to comply with IAEA concerns.117
In testimony in December 2010, Under Secretary of State William Burns asserted that “Russia’s
partnership [with the United States] in the diplomacy which led to Resolution 1929 and to its own
decision to cancel the S–300 sale was crucial. Without Russia’s partnership, I don’t think we
would have had Resolution 1929 [or] as significant a set of measures from the EU and from many
others. So that painstaking effort to work together with regard to a shared concern about Iran’s
nuclear ambitions has been right at the core of our relationship with Russia over the last couple of
years.” At the hearing, some Members raised concerns that Russia’s past and ongoing support for
Iran’s civil nuclear program might have facilitated its nuclear weapons ambitions. Under
Secretary Burns argued that Russia and other countries have become increasingly worried about
Iran’s nuclear intentions and have intensified their support for countervailing international
actions.118
In January 2011, Russia joined the other members of the Sextet at a meeting with Iran in Istanbul
to urge Iran to commit to a modified agreement worked out by Russia, the United States, and
France to exchange the bulk of Iran’s low-enriched uranium for fuel rods for the Tehran research
reactor. Iran raised preconditions to such an agreement that were rejected by the Sextet. Just
before the meeting, Russia joined the Sextet in calling for fully implementing the sanctions under
UNSC Resolution 1929, but again refused to join what it termed “unilateral sanctions” beyond
those agreed to by the UNSC. On January 27, 2011, then-President Medvedev stated that “Iran
needs to dispel the international community’s doubts in relation to its nuclear program. It [Iran]
should persuade us that this program is of a peaceful nature.”119
115 CRS Report RL32048, Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses, by Kenneth Katzman.
116 Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation. Speech by Dmitry Medvedev, President of the Russian
Federation, at the Meeting with Russian Ambassadors and Permanent Representatives to International Organizations,
July 13, 2010; Agence Presse France, July 13, 2010.
117 Transcript of Sergey Lavrov Interview, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, June 2, 2011.
118 U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Foreign Affairs, Hearing on Implementing Tougher Sanctions on
Iran: A Progress Report, December 1, 2010.
119 Interfax, January 27, 2011.
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The final declaration issued at the May 2011 meeting of the heads of state of the Group of 8
industrialized countries in France warned that “the severe proliferation challenges ... in Iran and
North Korea ... pose a threat to global stability.”120
On June 1, 2011, Lavrov stated that because the United States and European countries imposed
added sanctions on Iran after the approval of UNSC Resolution 1929—sanctions that he claimed
they had agreed to forego during negotiations prior to the approval of the resolution—Russia
would not agree to further UNSC sanctions.121 That same day, the Russian Foreign Ministry
reported that Lavrov rejected a call by visiting Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Moshe Ya'alon for
concerned countries to warn Iran that it faces military reprisals if it proceeds with its nuclear
weapons development program. According to the Foreign Ministry, Lavrov reiterated Russia’s
views that concerns about Iran’s nuclear program should be resolved exclusively through
negotiations and that Iran has the right to pursue a peaceful nuclear program.122
On June 9, 2011, the Sextet issued a statement calling for Iran to hold discussions on many
unresolved concerns to rule out a military component to Iran’s nuclear program. The statement
was issued in response to an announcement by Iran that it would greatly increase uranium
enrichment to 20%.
In November 2011, the IAEA issued a report warning that Iran had intensified its nuclear
weapons development program. Lavrov denounced the report as making “a totally unsupported
conclusion that Iran’s nuclear program had a military dimension.”123 Russia reportedly opposed
UNSC action on the report, terming further sanctions an attempt to trigger “regime change” in
Iran. Russia has instead urged the Sextet to pursue its “step-by-step” plan for easing sanctions in
return for actions by Iran to dispel international concerns.
In November 2011, the Washington Post alleged that Russian scientists were assisting Iran’s
nuclear program. Refuting the Washington Post and other Western media reports, on January 8,
2012, Russia’s state-owned Rosatom nuclear energy and weapons firm asserted that it had played
no role in Iran’s nuclear program beyond building the Bushehr nuclear power plant and supplying
medical isotopes.
In early January 2012, Iran announced that it had begun uranium enrichment at its underground
Fordow facility north of Qom. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Gennadiy Gatilov voiced “regret
[that] Iran continues to ignore international demands to alleviate concern over its nuclear program
and to freeze construction of [the] enrichment facility.” At the same time, he reiterated Russia’s
opposition to further UNSC sanctions against Iran.
The United States imposed added financial and other sanctions on Iran under the National
Defense Authorization Act of 2012, signed into law on December 31, 2011. An executive order
implementing these and other sanctions was issued on February 6, 2012. On January 23, 2012,
the EU also bolstered its sanctions on Iran, including by beginning to draw down imports of
120 G8 Declaration: Renewed Commitment For Freedom And Democracy, G8 Summit of Deauville, France, May 26-
27, 2011, at http://www.g20-g8.com/g8-g20/g8/english/live/news/renewed-commitment-for-freedom-and-
democracy.1314.html
121 Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation, June 2, 2011.
122 CEDR, June 1, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-950139; June 1, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-365001.
123 CEDR, January 25, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-950142.
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Iranian oil and to restrict financial transactions with Iranian banks. The U.S. sanctions came into
full effect in August 2012. Lavrov and other Russian officials have criticized the added U.S. and
EU sanctions.
On April 14, 2012, Iran and the Sextet (formally led by the EU High Representative for Foreign
Affairs) resumed talks in Istanbul after a 15-month lapse, and agreed to present detailed proposals
at a May 23-24, 2012, meeting in Baghdad. At this meeting, Iran rejected the proposals put forth
by the Sextet, insisting that economic sanctions be immediately lifted and its right to enrich
uranium be acknowledged. Russia’s emissary to the talks, Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey
Ryabkov, stated that Russia was satisfied with its level of cooperation with the United States at
the talks, although there were some differences. According to some reports, Russia wants to play
a larger role in the talks, and it agreed to host another meeting on June 18-19. At the G8 Summit
at Camp David, MD, on May 18-19, 2012, Medvedev joined Obama and other G8 leaders in
raising “grave concern” over Iran’s nuclear program and calling for Iranian cooperation with the
Sextet to “restore international confidence that Iran’s nuclear program is exclusively peaceful.”124
A Sextet meeting with Iran in Moscow on June 18-19, 2012, and a Sextet experts’ session in
Istanbul on July 3, 2012, were reported to be inconclusive, although the sides agreed to continue
meeting.
Just before President Putin’s June 25-26, 2012, visit to Israel, Foreign Minister Avigdor
Lieberman stated that although Russia was closely allied with the Sextet position on Iran, Israel
would seek to impress upon Putin the danger that faces Israel if Iran obtains nuclear weapons.
During Putin’s visit, President Shimon Peres urged him to take actions to prevent Iran from
acquiring nuclear weapons. Prime Minister Netanyahu stated that he called for Russia to demand
that Iran halt enriching uranium, relinquish all its enriched uranium, and dismantle its
underground nuclear facility near Qom. He also averred that the international community must
boost sanctions against Iran. President Putin stated that calls in Iran for Israel’s annihilation were
unacceptable, that the question of Iran’s nuclear program should be the subject of negotiations,
and that Iran has the right to the peaceful use of nuclear energy if the international community has
“absolute guarantees” that the program will not lead to nuclear weapons.125
In August 2012, the Russian Foreign Ministry raised concerns that newly implemented U.S.
sanctions against Iran could harm the interests of Russian firms operating in Iran, and thus impact
U.S.-Russia relations.126
In early September 2012, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov reiterated Russia’s
position that there is no proof that Iran is pursuing a nuclear weapons development program.
124 The White House, Office of the Press Secretary, Camp David Declaration, May 19, 2012.
125 The Kremlin, President of the Russian Federation, Vladimir Putin Answered Russian Journalists’ Questions, June
27, 2012; Israel, Government Press Office, Press Release: PM Netanyahu’s Statement After Meeting with President of
the Russian Federation, Mr. Vladimir Putin, June 25, 2012.
126 Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation, as reported in CEDR, August 13, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-
950144.
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Russia’s Role in the Middle East Quartet
Russia is a member of “the Quartet” (formed in 2002 by Russia, the United States, the EU, and
the U.N.) that mediates between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), chaired
by President Mahmoud Abbas.127 Russia supported the holding of the U.S.-brokered Annapolis
Conference in 2007 on a two-state solution, and the Quartet has agreed in principle to a Russian
proposal to hold a follow-on conference in Moscow at some point.
According to Russian analyst Dmitriy Trenin, Russia seeks to present itself as an unbiased arbiter
in the Quartet, and participates in order to demonstrate its status as a great power.128 Russian
Foreign Minister Lavrov met with Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal in 2006 to discuss the future of
the peace process after Hamas won a majority of seats in the Palestinian National Authority
Legislative Council. Russia argues that Hamas has popular support among Palestinians and that
Russian contacts with Hamas enable Russia to urge Hamas to moderate its behavior and take part
in the establishment of a peaceful Palestinian state. The other members of the Quartet maintain
that that there should be no engagement with Hamas until it forswears terrorism, recognizes
Israel’s right to exist, and supports the Middle East peace process as outlined in the 1993 Oslo
Accords. Russian President Medvedev met with Meshaal during his May 2010 trip to Syria. Israel
condemned Medvedev’s meeting with Meshaal.129
Russia and other members of the Quartet urged the resumption of direct talks between the PLO
and Israel after the last such talks in 2008. The sides agreed to resume direct talks in August 2010
and PLO chairman Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met on
September 2, 2010, in Washington, DC. Just days before the end of Israel’s moratorium on
settlements on the West Bank, the Quartet met and issued a statement on September 21, 2010,
calling for the moratorium to be continued.
In January 2011, then-President Medvedev met with President Abbas in Jericho, where Medvedev
did not declare recognition of Palestinian statehood but reaffirmed a statement of such support
made by the former Soviet Union in 1988. At this Quartet meeting, Secretary Clinton, Russian
Foreign Minister Lavrov, EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy
Catherine Ashton, and U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon issued a statement urging the
immediate resumption of peace talks, given the civil turmoil in the Middle East. On February 18,
2011, the United States vetoed a UNSC draft resolution supported by Russia that the United
States termed “unbalanced and one-sided” in its condemnation of all Israeli settlements
established in occupied Palestinian territory since 1967 as illegal.
Russia supported the signing of the agreement in May 2011 between Fatah and Hamas on
forming a power-sharing Palestinian Authority government for the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
Russia endorses the formation of a cabinet composed of “technocrats” rather than politicians who
will “base their policies on the platform of the PLO and on the Arab peace initiative,” including
the recognition of Israel, rejection of violence, and adherence to the Quartet decisions. Following
the formation of the cabinet of technocrats, legislative and presidential elections are proposed to
127 See also CRS Report RL34074, The Palestinians: Background and U.S. Relations, by Jim Zanotti.
128 Dmitriy Trenin, Russia’s Policy in the Middle East: Prospects for Consensus and Conflict with the United States,
The Century Foundation, 2010.
129 “Israel Slams Russia’s Hamas Stance,” Jerusalem Post, May 12, 2010; Baraq Ravid, “Are Russia-Israel Ties Really
‘Better Than Ever’ Under Lieberman?” Haaretz, November 15, 2010.
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be held within one year.130 On May 20, 2011, the Quartet issued a statement of support “for the
vision of Israeli-Palestinian peace outlined by U.S. President Barack Obama on May 19, 2011.
The Quartet agrees that moving forward on the basis of territory and security provides a
foundation for Israelis and Palestinians to reach a final resolution of the conflict through serious
and substantive negotiations and mutual agreement on all core issues.”131 Deputy Prime Minister
Moshe Ya’alon visited Russia in early June 2011 and reportedly praised Russia’s participation in
the Quartet, but stressed that “Hamas cannot be a partner for negotiations [and] cannot be
recognized as the legitimate authority in Gaza until it recognizes the State of Israel and renounces
terror entirely.”132 The United States has rejected dealing with Hamas unless it renounces
terrorism and meets other principles enunciated above by the Quartet, and has been wary of
French and Russian proposals for convening international conferences until the Israelis and the
Palestinians themselves make progress toward reopening talks.
The Obama Administration opposed the application for U.N. membership submitted by Palestine
to the UNSC on September 23, 2011, a submission supported by Russia. After the submission, the
Quartet issued a statement that acknowledged the submission, but stressed the resumption of
direct bilateral Israeli-Palestinian negotiations without delay or preconditions. The Quartet called
for progress on settling issues of territory and security within a few months, and it endorsed
Russia’s call for convening a Moscow conference to examine progress.
Holding the presidency at the 187th session of the UNESCO Executive Board in September-
October 2011, Russia recommended that the UNESCO General Conference at the end of October
vote to admit Palestine as a member. The United States voted against admission and later
announced that under current U.S. law, it would halt financial contributions to UNESCO. Foreign
Minister Lavrov explained that Russia accepted the argument of Palestine that admission would
not substitute for reaching a negotiated peace settlement with Israel, and “regretted” the U.S.
decision to halt contributions.133
In January 2012, Israeli-Palestinian negotiators held inconclusive “exploratory talks” that were
sponsored by Jordan and the Quartet. In February 2012, Fatah and Hamas agreed that Abbas
would form and lead a temporary unity government composed of non-party “technocrats” until
legislative and presidential elections were held in May 2012 (they have been postponed). Russia
welcomed the agreement, stating that a government led by Abbas would promote Israeli-
Palestinian negotiations in line with the proposals made by the Quartet in September 2011. In
March 2012, Islamic Jihad took responsibility for launching missiles from Gaza into Israel,
attacks that occurred days before a meeting of the Quartet at the U.N. in New York. Israel stated
that it held Hamas fully responsible for security in Gaza. The Quartet, including Secretary Clinton
and Foreign Minister Lavrov, issued a statement deploring “provocative actions” by both sides. In
the UNSC, however, Clinton condemned “in the strongest terms” the precipitating missile attacks
from the Gaza Strip. Russia reiterated that the risk of conflict in the Middle East had heightened
as a result of the “Arab Spring,” and that an Israeli-Palestinian peace settlement was one means to
130 Bloomberg Full Transcript Of Sergey Lavrov Interview, June 1, 2011, Moscow Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the
Russian Federation, June 2, 2011; Transcript of Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov’s Interview with Russian Media after
Attending CSTO Foreign Ministers Council Meeting in Minsk, May 31, 2011, Moscow Ministry of Foreign Affairs of
the Russian Federation, June 1, 2011.
131 U.S. Department of State, Office of the Spokesman, Joint Statement by the Quartet, May 20, 2011.
132 CEDR, June 1, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-365001.
133 For details, see CRS Report R42022, Palestinian Initiatives for 2011 at the United Nations , by Jim Zanotti and
Marjorie Ann Browne.
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lessen the risk. An April 2012 Quartet statement was criticized by the Palestinian Authority for
not requiring the freezing of settlement activity on the West Bank as a condition for the
resumption of peace talks.
At a press conference after his June 2012 meeting with Prime Minister Netanyahu during his visit
to Israel, President Putin stated that the progress of the Middle East peace process awaited more
U.S. attention after the U.S. presidential election. After meeting with Netanyahu, Putin held talks
with Palestinian President Abbas in Bethlehem, but no progress was reported in urging the
renewal of direct Israeli-Palestinian talks.
Bilateral Relations and North Korea
Russia has expanded its ties with North Korea in recent years as part of its policy of strengthening
its role as an Asia-Pacific power. Russia stresses a negotiated settlement of the Korean conflict
that protects the stability of its eastern regions and ensures a draw-down of U.S. forces in South
Korea. Russia also seeks the continuation of the six-party talks on North Korea’s de-
nuclearization (see below) as a means of containing, if not reducing, the threat posed by a
nuclear-armed Pyongyang, according to some observers. Russia prefers that the consolidation of
power by Kim Jong-un after the December 2011 death of his father, Kim Jong-Il, be relatively
peaceful, rather than involve a regime collapse that could involve refugee flows into Russia or
other trans-border problems, or the occupation of North Korea by South Korea or China,
according to some observers. Moscow has hoped to retain effective relations with Pyongyang
throughout the succession period, in this view. Russia seeks working relations with South Korea
for many of the same reasons—the pursuit of Asia-Pacific regional influence and stability in areas
near its borders—as well as for economic and trade benefits.134
A phase of closer Russia-North Korea ties was launched in February 2000, when the foreign
ministers of the two countries signed a Treaty on Friendship, Good-Neighborly Relations and
Cooperation. Then-President Vladimir Putin visited Pyongyang in July 2000 and Supreme Leader
Kim Jong-Il visited Russia in August 2001. Because of the closer bilateral ties, North Korea
insisted in 2003 that it would not take part in multinational denuclearization talks unless Russia
also participated. These six-party talks (including the two Koreas, the United States, Russia,
China, and Japan) opened in August 2003. Russia-North Korea relations appeared strained
somewhat after Russia supported UNSC Resolution 1718 in October 2006 that criticized a North
Korean nuclear test and applied sanctions. In February 2007, North Korea pledged to shut down
and dismantle its Yongbyon nuclear facilities in exchange for humanitarian and developmental
assistance, but further progress evaporated and six-party talks have been halted since December
2008. In April 2009, North Korea announced its withdrawal from the talks.
Russian-North Korean tensions increased in April-May 2009 after Russia supported the UNSC in
approving Resolution 1874 that condemned North Korean missile and nuclear tests and increased
sanctions on North Korea. Russia’s Permanent Representative to the U.N., Vitaliy Churkin,
stressed that the sanctions excluded military force and argued that they would be reviewed once
North Korea renewed cooperation within the format of the six-party talks. Russia and China
insisted that a UNSC Presidential Statement issued in July 2010 not assess blame for the sinking
134 Alexander Vorontsov, Current Russia—North Korea Relations: Challenges And Achievements, The Brookings
Institution, February 2007; Georgy Toloraya, “Russia and the North Korean Knot,” The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan
Focus Newsletter, April 19, 2010.
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of the South Korean naval corvette Cheonan. Russia argued that its stance of not assessing blame
would help “de-escalate tensions on the Korean Peninsula, restore dialogue and interaction
between North Korea and South Korea, and resume the six-party talks.”135
Seemingly taking a stronger stance than in the case of the attack on the Cheonan, Russian Foreign
Minister Lavrov immediately condemned the North Korean artillery attack and the loss of life on
South Korea’s Yeonpyeong Island in late November 2010, but also called for restraint by both
sides. He similarly expressed “profound concern” over revelations by North Korea in November
2010 that it was enriching uranium as part of a civil nuclear power program, and termed such
enrichment a violation of UNSC resolutions and the 2005 denuclearization statement.136 The
heads of state of the Group of 8 industrialized nations issued a statement in late May 2011
warning that the nuclear programs of North Korea and Iran are a threat to global stability.
In late August 2011, Supreme Leader Kim Jong-Il met with President Medvedev in the
southeastern Russian town of Ulan-Ude. Kim Jong-Il reportedly reiterated a proposal to return to
the six-party talks “without preconditions,” while accepting a moratorium on nuclear tests and
production after the resumption of the talks. The U.S. State Department issued a statement that
“any engagement with the North Koreans should be conducted in a way that does not detract from
the international community’s clear message of concern about the North’s weapons programs, and
the necessity for Pyongyang to do what is necessary to return to the Six-Party talks.”137 The
Russian ambassador to South Korea admitted that the announcement by North Korea that it
would resume six-party talks “without preconditions” was a repudiation of U.S. and South
Korean calls for North Korea to halt all of its nuclear activities and allow U.N. inspectors to
verify the suspension before the resumption of talks. He asserted that Russia agrees with the other
parties to the talks, but he appeared to argue for further talks with North Korea to alter its
stance.138
At the August 2011 Russia-North Korea summit and an intergovernmental meeting held just after
the summit, the two sides reportedly continued to argue over a final settlement of North Korea’s
Soviet-era debt. They did agree to step up discussions of building a gas pipeline from Russia to
South Korea, as well as plans for electrical transmission lines and railways from Russia to South
Korea. As part of the railways project, an agreement was signed in 2008 to work on a small
section of track and stations between Russia and North Korea that are planned to be completed in
2012. After Kim Jong-Il’s death, Russia stated that work continued on these projects. At the end
of January 2012, Foreign Minister Lavrov urged that the United States and South Korea postpone
plans for military exercises in February and March-April 2012 that North Korea’s new leadership
might view as hostile.
After North Korea attempted to launch a missile, Russia cooperated with other members of the
UNSC in issuing a U.S.-proposed Presidential Statement that “strongly condemned” the missile
test and called for tightening sanctions against North Korea.
135 “Moscow Backs UN Security Council Statement on S. Korean Corvette Incident,” Russia & CIS General Newswire,
July 10, 2010.
136 CEDR, December 1, 2010, Doc. No. CEP-8009; Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation, Working
Visit to Russia by Pak Ui Chun, Foreign Minister of the DPRK, December 14, 2010.
137 U.S. Department of State, Office of the Spokesperson, Taken Question: Russia/North Korea: Joint Naval Exercises
in 2012, September 15, 2011.
138 Open Source Center, Korean Peninsula: Daily Report, August 26, 2011, Doc. No. KPP-971084.
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At the G8 Summit in Camp David, MD, on May 18-19, 2012, Russian Prime Minister Medvedev
joined President Obama and other G8 leaders in raising concerns about North Korea’s
“provocative actions,” including its uranium enrichment program, and they “condemned” the
April 2012 attempted ballistic missile launch. They also pledged to cooperate in the UNSC in
case of additional North Korean acts.139
Bilateral Relations and Syria
U.S.-Russia relations increasingly have become strained as a result of a Syrian government
crackdown on civil unrest that intensified in early 2011.140 Russia has maintained its close ties to
the regime of Syrian President Bashar Hafez al-Asad throughout the conflict. Russia’s ties with
Syria include arms sales and a naval base at Tartus—its only Mediterranean Sea facility—which
Russia had refurbished before the intensified unrest. In October 2011, Russia and China vetoed a
UNSC resolution that strongly condemned “the continued grave and systematic human rights
violations and the use of force against civilians by the Syrian authorities” and called on all states
“to exercise vigilance and restraint” in supplying arms to the Syrian government. Russia has
continued to provide weaponry to the al-Asad government as violence intensifies. In early
February 2012, the United States strongly urged Russia and China to support a second, stronger
UNSC resolution condemning “gross violations” of human rights by the al-Asad government
against civilians and calling for the “political transition to a democratic, plural political system.”
Both countries, however, vetoed the resolution on February 4, 2012. U.S. Permanent
Representative to the U.N. Susan Rice stated after the veto that “the United States is disgusted
that a couple of members of this Council continue to prevent us from ... addressing an ever-
deepening crisis in Syria.... This intransigence is even more shameful when you consider that at
least one of these members continues to deliver weapons to al-Asad.”141 Foreign Minister Lavrov
rejected the resolution as unbalanced, arguing that it gave more support to the oppositionists than
to the al-Asad government, and urged negotiations between conflicting parties to end the
violence.
On March 20, 2012, Lavrov appeared to signal greater Russian displeasure with actions of the
Asad government, and indicated that Russia would support a presidential statement by the UNSC
in support of a peace effort by the Special Emissary of the U.N. and Arab League, Kofi Annan. At
the same time, Lavrov continued to reject efforts to get President al-Asad to step down. Russia
supported the UNSC presidential statement on March 22, 2012, that called for a ceasefire and
expressed backing for the Annan mission. Russian diplomats presented the presidential statement
as a “success” of Russian foreign policy in obtaining UNSC recognition of its viewpoint.
Following the killing of over 100 civilians in the village of al Hawlah (Houla) on May 26, 2012,
Russia agreed to a UNSC resolution that condemned Syrian government artillery and tank
shelling of the village, but rejected accusations that the Syrian government was involved in the
point-blank killings of many of the civilians. Russian U.N. emissary Aleksandr Pankin claimed
that the killings were in effect a provocation by the insurgents and those opposed to the Annan
peace efforts. Russian state-owned television went further, claiming that the killings had been
139 The White House, Office of the Press Secretary, Camp David Declaration, May 19, 2012.
140 See also CRS Report RL33487, Armed Conflict in Syria: U.S. and International Response, by Jeremy M. Sharp and
Christopher M. Blanchard.
141 U.S. Mission to the United Nations, Explanation of Vote by Ambassador Susan E. Rice, U.S. Permanent
Representative to the United Nations, At a Security Council Session on Syria, February 4, 2012.
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carried out by al Qaeda and other insurgents who were allied with Western interests, in order to
justify Western intervention and the overthrow of Asad.142 The Russian Foreign Ministry also
deplored the subsequent ouster of Syrian diplomats from several EU states in protest against the
killings. On May 28, 2012, Foreign Minister Lavrov claimed that Russia’s main interest was
halting the violence in Syria and that Russia did not care what regime ruled the country. However,
he immediately appeared to contradict this statement by criticizing those calling for regime
change.
On May 31, 2012, Secretary Clinton warned that Russia’s stance was threatening to result in the
emergence of full-scale civil war in Syria, something Russia claimed to fear, and she urged
Russia to back a political transition in the country. That same day, U.S. Permanent Representative
to the U.N. Susan Rice criticized as “reprehensible” the docking of a Russian ship a few days
previously that contained weapons for the al-Asad regime.
The main issue of discussion at the June 2012 U.S.-Russia summit appeared to be Syria. Both
leaders claimed that they had agreed on some aspects of the situation in Syria, and both called for
a cessation of violence, adherence to the peace efforts undertaken by Kofi Annan, and a political
transition to a democratic system “implemented by the Syrians themselves.” The latter
formulation appeared based on Russia’s insistence on non-interference in Syria’s internal affairs.
Tensions appeared exacerbated during the summit by a report that a Russian ship was on its way
to deliver attack helicopters to Syria. The supply ship subsequently turned around after British
insurers cancelled the ship’s coverage. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov later claimed that
the ship was carrying refurbished attack helicopters and air defense equipment, and asserted that
the latter was aimed to enhance Syria’s ability to “expel external aggression.”143
At an international meeting in Geneva on the Syria conflict in late June 2012, U.N. Envoy Kofi
Annan reportedly worked to achieve agreement between the United States and Russia on a peace
plan for Syria. The conferees agreed that the Asad government and the rebels would form a
transitional government leading to a political settlement of the conflict. The United States and
Russia disagreed on a U.S. call for Asad not to be part of the transitional government. At a
conference of the Friends of Syria group of countries in Paris on July 6, 2012, Secretary Clinton
called for Russia (which boycotted the conference) to support sanctions against the Asad
government in case of non-compliance with the peace plan.
On July 19, 2012, Russia (and China) vetoed a UNSC resolution that extended the mandate of the
Annan observer mission if the Asad government moved troops and heavy weapons from
populated civilian areas. If the Asad government failed to comply, the resolution called for
possible sanctions against the Syrian government upon further UNSC action. Russia claimed that
approval for possible sanctions could open the way to military intervention, a stance that U.S.
ambassador to the UN Susan Rice asserted was “paranoid if not disingenuous.”144 An alternative
resolution—extending the mandate of the mission without provisions opposed by Russia—was
approved.
142 CEDR, May 29, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-950146.
143 Open Source Center, Central Eurasia: Daily Report (hereafter CEDR), June 21, 2012, Doc. No. CEP-950170.
144 UN Security Council, 6810th Meeting, Security Council Fails to Adopt Draft Resolution on Syria That Would Have
Threatened Sanctions, Due to Negative Votes of China, Russian Federation, Press Release, July 19, 2012.
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In July 2012, it was reported that a Russian naval squadron was carrying out Mediterranean Sea
maneuvers that would include docking at the Russian naval facility at Tartus. Russian media
reported that Russian Navy officials had considered whether equipment and about 50 Russian
sailors should be evacuated from the naval facility, but had decided that the Asad government was
not in danger of imminent collapse. After docking at Tartus, the ships returned to Russia in late
August.145
The civil conflict in Syria was a central topic in a meeting between Secretary Clinton and
President Putin and Foreign Minister Lavrov on September 8, 2012, on the sidelines of the Asia-
Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Vladivostok, Russia. Secretary Clinton
reported that she rejected a Russian proposal for another UNSC resolution backing the Geneva
peace process that did not include consequences for non-compliance by the Asad regime.
Objecting to sales by Russia’s Rosoboronexport state arms export firm to the Asad regime, on
July 19, 2012, the House of Representatives approved language in H.R. 5856 (Young), the
Department of Defense Appropriations Act for FY2013, to prohibit the provision of funds to
Rosoboronexport. In introducing the language, Representative James Moran had argued that the
Defense Department should not be purchasing helicopters from Rosoboronexport for the Afghan
National Security Forces, but should make alternative supply arrangements.
Arms Control Issues146
Cooperative Threat Reduction
Since 1992, the United States has spent over $10 billion to help Russia and the other former
Soviet states dismantle nuclear weapons and ensure the security of nuclear weapons, weapons-
grade nuclear material, other weapons of mass destruction, and related technological know-how.
This funding supports the Cooperative Threat Reduction Program (CTR) managed by the
Department of Defense, along with nonproliferation programs managed by the Departments of
Energy and State. These programs have helped to eliminate nuclear weapons and delivery
vehicles in Ukraine, Belarus, and Kazakhstan, and to transport, store, and eliminate weapons in
Russia. They have also funded improvements in security at storage areas for both nuclear
weapons and nuclear materials. The two sides have also cooperated to construct a chemical
weapons destruction facility in Shchuch’ye.
The focus of U.S. threat reduction and nonproliferation assistance has changed over the years.
Initially, many in Congress saw U.S. assistance as an emergency response to impending chaos in
the Soviet Union. Even after the sense of immediate crisis passed in 1992 and 1993, many
analysts and Members of Congress remained concerned about the potential for diversion or a loss
of control of nuclear and other weapons. Now, much of the work on strategic offensive arms
reductions has been completed, and the United States has allocated a growing proportion of its
funding to projects that focus on securing and eliminating chemical and biological weapons and
securing storage sites that house nuclear warheads removed from deployed weapons systems.
Further, in recent years, the United States has increased funding for projects that seek to secure
145 Interfax, September 4, 2012.
146 Prepared by Amy Woolf, Specialist in Nuclear Weapons Policy.
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borders and track materials, in an effort to keep weapons of mass destruction away from
terrorists. This has directed a growing proportion of the funding to nations other than Russia.
Many analysts in the United States see the U.S. threat reduction and nonproliferation programs in
Russia as a model for U.S. nonproliferation and anti-terrorism assistance to nations around the
world. Some who support this expansion of U.S. threat reduction assistance argue, however, that
the United States should not increase funding for other nations at the expense of funding for
programs in Russia because Russia is still home to large stocks of insecure nuclear materials.
The New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty
The Obama Administration pledged to pursue arms control negotiations with Russia and to,
specifically, negotiate a new treaty to replace the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty
(START). In April 2009, Presidents Obama and Medvedev agreed that a new treaty would
address deployed strategic offensive nuclear forces, leaving discussions on nonstrategic nuclear
weapons and warheads in storage to a future agreement, and to reduce their deployed forces to
levels below those set by the 2002 Moscow Treaty.
After nearly a year of negotiations, the United States and Russia signed the New START Treaty
on April 8, 2010. This treaty limits each side to no more than 800 deployed and non-deployed
ICBM and SLBM launchers and deployed and non-deployed heavy bombers equipped to carry
nuclear armaments. Within that total, each side can retain no more than 700 deployed ICBMs,
deployed SLBMs, and deployed heavy bombers equipped to carry nuclear armaments. The treaty
also limits each side to no more than 1,550 deployed warheads. The new treaty also contains a
number of complex and overlapping monitoring provisions that will help each side verify the
other’s compliance with the treaty. Many analysts believe that this verification regime is
particularly important because it mandates transparency and cooperation between the two sides.
The Obama Administration has argued that the New START Treaty will strengthen U.S. security
and contribute to the “re-set” in relations with Russia. The Administration has also noted that the
treaty contributes to U.S. nuclear nonproliferation goals by indicating that the United States and
Russia are both committed to meeting their disarmament obligations under Article VI of the
Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. Some, however, have questioned whether the United States and
Russia need a treaty to maintain stability in their relationship and reduce their nuclear weapons.
They note that Russia is already reducing its forces as it retires aging systems. Moreover, some
question whether arms control agreements between the United States and Russia will have any
affect on the goals and interests of nations seeking their own nuclear weapons.
The Foreign Relations Committee, Senate Armed Services Committee, and Senate Intelligence
Committee held a total of 21 hearings and briefings with Administration officials, senior
statesmen, and outside analysts between April and July 2010. Most witnesses praised the treaty,
and, although recognizing that it contains only modest reductions in U.S. and Russian nuclear
weapons, argued that, on balance, it will enhance stability and predictability. Many also noted that
its verification regime will restore the ability of the United States and Russia to monitor each
other’s strategic forces. Some, however, questioned whether the treaty might restrain U.S. missile
defense programs. The Administration sought to alleviate this concern by noting that the treaty
contains no limits on current or planned missile defense programs and simply acknowledges that
robust missile defenses can undermine offensive forces. Others have noted that the treaty does not
address Russia’s stockpile of nonstrategic nuclear weapons. Treaty supporters agree with this
point but argue that the United States and Russia cannot move on to a treaty that will address
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these weapons until the parties ratify and implement New START. On September 16, 2010, the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee approved the Resolution of Ratification on the New START
by a vote of 14-4. The full Senate approved the treaty’s ratification by a vote of 71-26, on
December 22, 2010.
New START entered into force on February 5, 2011. According to the U.S. State Department,
implementation is well underway, and “the process so far has been positive and pragmatic.”147
The parties have exchanged over 1,800 notifications during the first year, and both have
conducted the full complement of 18 permitted on-site inspections. The Treaty’s Bilateral
Consultative Commission has also met three times during the Treaty’s first year.
Russia and Missile Defense148
Background: Recent U.S. Missile Defense Plans149
Successive U.S. governments have supported the development of a missile defense system to
protect against long-range ballistic missile threats from adversary states. The Bush Administration
argued that North Korea and Iran represented strategic threats and questioned whether they could
be deterred by conventional means. In 2007, the Bush Administration proposed deploying a
ground-based mid-course defense (GMD) element of the larger Ballistic Missile Defense (BMD)
system in Europe to defend against a possible Iranian missile threat. This “European Capability”
(EC) system would have included 10 interceptors in Poland and a radar in the Czech Republic.
Both countries signed agreements with the Bush Administration permitting GMD facilities to be
stationed on their territory; however, the two countries’ parliaments decided to wait to ratify the
accords until after the Obama Administration clarified its intentions on missile defense policy.
In September 2009, the Obama Administration canceled the Bush-proposed European BMD
program. Instead, Defense Secretary Gates announced U.S. plans to further develop a regional
BMD capability that could be surged on relatively short notice during crises or as the situation
might demand. Gates argued this new capability, known as the Phased Adaptive Approach (PAA),
would be based initially around existing BMD sensors and Patriot, THAAD and Aegis BMD
interceptors, and would be more responsive and adaptable to growing concern over the direction
and pace of Iranian short- and medium-range ballistic missile proliferation. The Administration
plans for the PAA to evolve and expand over the next decade to include BMD against
intermediate- and long-range Iranian ballistic missiles. This effort is largely supported by
Congress. Phase 1 of the Administration’s European Phased Adaptive Approach (EPAA) was
completed on December 21, 2011, as planned.
147 U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Arms Control, Verification and Compliance, New START Treaty
Implementation Update, Fact Sheet, Washington, D.C., February 3, 2012, http://www.state.gov/t/avc/rls/183335.htm.
148 For additional information, see CRS Report RL34051, Long-Range Ballistic Missile Defense in Europe, by Steven
A. Hildreth and Carl Ek.
149 Prepared by Steven A. Hildreth, Specialist in Missile Defense.
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The Russian Response150
The EC program significantly affected U.S.-Russia relations. At the February 2007 Wehrkunde
security conference in Munich, Russian President Vladimir Putin strongly criticized the Bush
Administration’s proposal, maintaining that it would lead to “an inevitable arms race.” Russia
threatened to abrogate the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, and also announced
that it had suspended compliance with the Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty. In August 2008,
following the signing of the U.S.-Poland agreement, Russia once more vociferously objected to
the Bush Administration’s missile defense plan; a Russian general stated that Poland’s hosting of
the interceptors could make it a target for a nuclear attack.
Some analysts argued that Russia had other motives for raising alarms about the U.S. missile
defense system: to foment discord among NATO member states; and to draw attention away from
Russia’s suppression of domestic dissent, its aggressive foreign policy actions, and its past
nuclear technology cooperation with Iran. Observers pointed out that Russian acceptance of
NATO enlargement in 2004 was conditioned on a tacit understanding that NATO or U.S. military
expansion into the new member states would not occur. The proposed European GMD in this
regard was seen as unacceptable to Russia.
On November 5, 2008—the day after the U.S. presidential election—President Medvedev stated
that Russia would deploy short-range Iskander missiles to the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad,
which borders Poland and Lithuania, if the EC were built. In late January 2009, however, the
Russian media reported that Moscow had “suspended” plans to move short-range missiles to
Kaliningrad because the Obama Administration was not “pushing ahead” with the EC
deployment. However, there were reports that President Medvedev at the July 2009 G-8 (Group
of eight highly industrialized nations) summit may have intimated that the Iskander deployment
was still an option.
On February 7, 2009, at the annual Wehrkunde conference, Vice President Biden stated that “we
will continue to develop missile defenses to counter a growing Iranian capability…. We will do
so in consultation with our NATO allies and Russia.”151 However, the Obama Administration also
indicated that it was prepared to open talks with Tehran if it is willing to shelve its nuclear
program and renounce support of terrorism. During a February 10 visit to Prague, Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton said that any change in U.S. policy on missile defense would depend on
Iran, but that “we are a long, long way from seeing such evidence of any behavior change” in
Iran.152
In early March 2009, the media reported that President Obama had sent a letter to President
Medvedev offering to stop the development of the EC if Russia cooperated with international
efforts to halt Iran’s nuclear weapons and missile programs. President Obama denied such a quid
pro quo, stating that “what I said in the letter was that, obviously, to the extent that we are
lessening Iran’s commitment to nuclear weapons, then that reduces the pressure for, or the need
150 Prepared by Carl Ek, Specialist in International Relations.
151 Vice President Joseph Biden’s speech at the 45th Munich Security Conference, http://www.securityconference.de/
konferenzen/rede.php?menu_2009=&menu_konferenzen=&sprache=en&id=238&
152 “Clinton Says Missile Shield Hinges in Part on Iran,” Reuters, February 10, 2009; “Obama Seen Unlikely to Hedge
on Missile Defense,” Associated Press, February 13, 2009.
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for a missile defense system. In no way does that diminish my commitment to [the security of]
Poland, the Czech Republic and other NATO members.”153
In a joint statement issued at their “get acquainted” meeting on April 1, 2009, Presidents Obama
and Medvedev acknowledged that differences remained in their views toward the placement of
U.S. missile defenses in Europe, but pledged to examine “new possibilities for mutual
international cooperation in the field of missile defense.” Later that month, however, Russian
Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov charged that “[U.S.] work in the missile defense has
intensified, including in the NATO format.” Shortly thereafter, in a Russian media interview,
Ryabkov was asked to comment on U.S.-Russia-NATO cooperation on missile defense through
the use of Russian radar installations. He explained that the Russian offer was predicated on the
fulfillment of “certain preliminary stages,” including the U.S. cancellation of the EC program,
followed by a threat assessment, and then by political and economic measures to eliminate the
threat.154
In early June 2009, a Russian official indicated that Moscow would not likely be willing to
reduce its nuclear weapons arsenal unless the United States were to scrap plans to establish its
missile defense site in Poland and the Czech Republic. However, the Russian government also
stated that it still might deploy Iskander missiles to Kaliningrad if the United States were to
transfer Patriot missile batteries to Poland.155
At the July 2009 U.S.-Russia summit, the two presidents declared in a joint statement that their
governments “plan to continue the discussion concerning the establishment of cooperation in
responding to the challenge of ballistic missile proliferation,” and that both countries would task
experts “to work together to analyze the ballistic missile challenges of the 21st century and to
prepare appropriate recommendations, giving priority to the use of political and diplomatic
methods.” One day after the meeting, however, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov stated
that if the Obama Administration decided to pursue missile defense unilaterally, Russia might be
reluctant to reduce its nuclear arsenal.156
As noted above, in September 2009 the Obama Administration’s announced a new program for a
European-based BMD. In Russia, President Medvedev called the change “a responsible move,”
adding that “we value the responsible approach of the U.S. President to our agreement. I am
ready to continue our dialogue.”157 In addition, Moscow appeared to back away from its earlier
signal that it might deploy Iskander missiles to Kaliningrad. In November, the U.S. ambassador to
153 The White House. Office of the Press Secretary. Remarks By President Obama and British Prime Minister Gordon
Brown After Meeting, March 3, 2009.
154 “President Obama, Russian President Medvedev Commit To Reduce Nuclear Arms, Reset Relationship,” US Fed
News, April 11, 2009; “Russia Warns U.S. Stepping Up Shield Plans—Agency,” Reuters, April 21, 2009; Russian
Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Interview of Russian Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergey Ryabkov on Disarmament
Issues, April 23, 2009.
155 “Russian General Links Arms Cuts To Missile Shield,” Associated Press. June 5, 2009; “Russian Source: Patriot
Missiles To ‘Cloak’ Strategic Effort,” Interfax, May 22, 2009.
156 The White House. Office of the Press Secretary. Joint Statement By Dmitry A. Medvedev, President of the Russian
Federation, and Barack Obama, President of the United States, On Missile Defense Issues, July 6, 2009; “Russia
Warns U.S. Over Missile Shield,” Associated Press, July 7, 2009.
157 “Obama Cancels Bush Plan For European Missile Shield That Had Soured Relations With Russia,” Associated
Press Newswire. September 17, 2009; “Medvedev Praises Obama’s Move on Europe Missile Shield,” RIA Novosti,
September 17, 2009.
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Ukraine quashed rumors that the United States had been discussing with Kyiv the deployment of
missile defense facilities in Ukraine.
Some analysts on both sides of the Atlantic, however, argued that cancelling the Bush
Administration’s BMD plan could be viewed by Moscow as a climb-down resulting from
Russia’s incessant diplomatic pressure.158 Further, some critics faulted the White House for not
having gained anything from Moscow in exchange for its change in policy. However, Obama
Administration supporters maintained that Russia likely would not have wished to reveal an
obvious quid pro quo immediately; Administration backers advised critics to wait and see what
actions Russia would take, particularly with respect to cooperation with the United States on
policy toward Iran.
In October 2009, during a visit to Warsaw by Vice President Biden, Polish President Donald Tusk
announced that Poland would participate in the Obama Administration’s new BMD program by
hosting SM-3 short- to medium-range missiles.159
In December 2009, NATO foreign ministers commented favorably on the new U.S. missile
defense plan, and reiterated the alliance’s willingness to cooperate with Russia on the issue,
stating that they reaffirmed “the Alliance’s readiness to explore the potential for linking United
States, NATO and Russian missile defense systems at an appropriate time. The United States’ new
approach provides enhanced possibilities to do this.” The Russian media reported that NATO and
Russia had formed a working group to study the issue. In a speech shortly thereafter, NATO
Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said that he hoped the alliance and Russia would have
a joint system by 2020.160
Before long, however, Russia began to criticize the new U.S. plan for missile defense against
Iran, reviving the argument that it would compromise Russia’s nuclear forces. In late December
Prime Minister Putin tied discussions over missile defense to the renegotiation of START. He
asserted that Moscow would need to beef up its offensive nuclear weapons forces in order to
“preserve a strategic balance” with the planned U.S. missile defense system. A State Department
spokesperson acknowledged the relationship between offensive and defensive missile
capabilities, but maintained that the two countries should discuss missile defense “in a separate
venue.” The Administration also said that it would “continue to reject any negotiated restraints on
U.S. ballistic missile defenses.”161 Observers assert that Putin’s intervention would not likely
affect the disarmament talks. Regarding missile defense, in January 2010 Russian Foreign
Minister Lavrov stated that Russia had “told the U.S. and NATO that it is necessary to start
everything from scratch—to jointly analyze the origin and types of missile proliferation risks and
threats.”162
158 “Russia Could Scrap Baltic Missile Plans Following U.S. Move,” RIA Novosti, September 18, 2009.
159 “US/CEE: Biden Touts New Missile Plan In Central Europe,” Oxford Analytica, October 22, 2009.
160 NATO. Meeting of the North Atlantic Council at the level of Foreign Ministers held at NATO Headquarters,
Brussels: Final Statement, December 4, 2009, at http://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/news_59699.htm?mode=
pressrelease; “Russia, NATO Form Working Group on Missile Defense—Rogozin,” RIA Novosti, December 5, 2009;
“Russia Not Ready to Set Up Missile Defense Shield Together With U.S.—Lavrov,” Interfax, January 22, 2010.
161 U.S. Department of Defense. Ballistic Missile Defense Review Report, Pt. IV, February 2010.
162 “Putin Plays MD Card, Placates Hardliners,” Oxford Analytica, December 29, 2009; “Russia to Continue Offensive
Arms to Balance U.S.—Putin,” RIA Novosti, December 29, 2009; “U.S. Missile Shield Holding Up Nuclear Deal—
Putin,” Reuters, December 29, 2009; “U.S. Rejects Russia Shield Concerns,” BBC News, December 29, 2009.
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Also in January 2010, the United States and Poland announced that, under the terms of the August
2008 agreement between Warsaw and Washington, a battery of short-range, surface-to-air Patriot
missiles—along with a crew of about 100 U.S. service personnel—would be rotated from
Germany to Poland in June and stationed close to Poland’s border with Kaliningrad. Foreign
Minister Lavrov claimed that he “doesn’t understand” the apparent need for Poland to defend
itself from Russia. In response to the planned deployment of the Patriots, a Russian official
indicated that Moscow might strengthen its Baltic fleet. In February 2010, a Polish official
expressed doubts that the Patriots would be stationed permanently in Poland.163
On February 4, 2010, the U.S. and Romanian governments announced that Bucharest had agreed
to host U.S. short-to-medium-range interceptor missiles to extend missile defense into southern
Europe. The Romanians reportedly hope that the deployment will help cement bilateral ties, as
well as protect Romanian territory—the Bush Administration’s plan would only have covered the
western part of the country from a possible Iranian missile launch. A State Department
spokesperson and Romanian President Traian Basescu both stated that the system was not
intended to guard against Russia.
Russian officials, including the chief of Russia’s general staff, countered that the missile defense
system was indeed directed at Russia, and that the proposed deployment likely would delay
negotiations in arms talks between Russia and the United States. Moscow also expressed vexation
over the possibility of U.S. Aegis anti-missile ships patrolling the Black Sea. Nevertheless,
commenting on Iran’s stepped-up uranium enrichment activities, the head of Russia’s National
Security Council appeared to confirm international concerns about whether Iran’s eventual goals
are scientific or military; he stated that doubts about Iran’s intentions “are fairly well-grounded.”
However, Dmitry Rogozin, Russia’s ambassador to NATO, stated that “maybe [U.S. BMD] is
against Iran, but this system could be aimed against any other country, including against Russia’s
strategic nuclear potential.” The ambassador took a rather truculent attitude toward the planned
deployment. Writing in Twitter, Rogozin, who reportedly has a reputation for being outspoken,
responded to the Romanian announcement by stating “the Americans and their allies want to
surround the cave of the Russian bear? ... How many times must they be reminded how
dangerous this is!? The bear will come out and kick the ass of these pathetic hunters.”164
Some analysts have argued, however, that the interceptors planned for Romania would not be able
to take out a Russian ICBM launched at the United States. A Russian military analyst, writing in
RIA Novosti, conceded that the Obama-proposed SM-3 interceptors stationed anywhere in Europe
would be incapable of downing Russian long-range ballistic missiles. He argued that Moscow’s
main objections were that (1) it had not been consulted on the decision, and (2) the U.S. system
might be subject to change. On the first point, a spokesperson for the Romanian Foreign Ministry
maintained that Russia had been kept in the loop, stating that “information coming from our
American partners indicate that in the time that followed the September 2009 announcement by
163 “CEE/Russia: CEE Attitudes to Russia become More Sober,” Oxford Analytica, January 21, 2010; “Polish Missile
Base Reignites Tension with Russia,” Deutsche Welle, January 22, 2009; “USA May Renege on Patriot Missile
Deployment Accord—Polish Daily,” BBC Monitoring European, February 12, 2010.
164 “Russia Says Concerned at Romania Hosting U.S. Missiles,” Reuters News, February 5, 2010; “Russia: Disconnect
Between MD Policy, Iran Persist,” IHS Global Insight Daily Analysis, February 5, 2010; “Romania Agrees to Host
U.S. Anti-Missile System,” Oxford Analytica,. February 10, 2010; “Russia Toughens Line on Iran Nuclear Ambitions,”
Agence France Presse, February 9, 2010; “Twitter Diplomacy: Envoy Says Russia Will ‘Kick Ass’ of U.S.” Agence
France Presse, February 10, 2010.
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the U.S. president, the U.S. had detailed consultations with Russia concerning their plans for the
anti-missile defense system.” Also, on February 16, U.S. Under Secretary of State for Arms
Control and International Security Ellen Tauscher stated that Russia had been told of the planned
deployment to Romania. On the latter point, Russia is concerned that the SM-3 interceptors could
eventually be upgraded to bring down ICBMs without Russia’s knowledge, as the United States is
not required to share information about its missile defense system.165
On February 12, Bulgaria’s prime minister announced that he supported participation in the U.S.
missile defense system; the U.S. ambassador to Bulgaria confirmed that discussions on such a
deployment were in their early stages with Bulgaria—and with other countries. Bulgaria’s foreign
minister noted that the missile shield would also protect Russia from the threat of Iranian
missiles. Russia, however, professed that it had been caught unawares by the announcement;
Foreign Minister Lavrov stated that “we have already questioned our U.S. partners in Washington
... as to the meaning of this, and why we have this Bulgarian surprise after the Romanian
surprise.” Russian NATO Ambassador Rogozin tweeted that “Bulgarians are our brothers, but
politically they are promiscuous.” A few days later, Russia turned aside an apparent offer by
Transnistria, a breakaway region of Moldova, to host Russian Iskander missiles.166
It has been argued that the new U.S. focus on Southern Europe is likely viewed with less alarm by
Russia than the former plan, which included Poland and the Czech Republic. However, a member
of the Russian Duma claimed that the possible deployments do not square with the Obama
Administration’s intention to improve relations with the Russian Federation. Konstantin
Kosachyov, chairman of the Duma’s International Affairs Committee, stated on February 16 that
“the most regrettable thing is that these plans [to deploy missile defense facilities] do not fit the
well known ‘reset’ program in Russian-American relations in any way.”167
Russia sought to tie discussions over missile defense to the renegotiation of START, contrary to
the July 2009 agreement reached by Presidents Obama and Medvedev not to link the two.
However, the United States refused to accede to the Russian position, and on April 8, 2010, the
two governments signed the New START Treaty, which was ratified by the U.S. Senate in
December and by the Russian Duma in January 2011. The agreement acknowledges that there is a
relationship between offensive and defensive systems, but does not place any limits on missile
defense or on the expanded system that has been proposed by the Obama Administration.168
On July 3, 2010, Secretary of State Clinton and Polish Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski signed an
annex to the 2008 U.S.-Poland agreement permitting the deployment of U.S. BMD in Poland.
The amendment provided approval for the deployment of SM-3 missiles, rather than silo-based
165 “Romania Says U.S. Informed Russia on Anti-missile Shield Plan,” BBC Monitoring European, February 10, 2010;
“U.S. Kept Russia Informed About Romania Missiles Plan—U.S. Diplomat,” Interfax, February 16, 2010; “U.S. and
Romania: A New Alignment?” RIA Novosti, February 9, 2010; “Russia Cool to U.S. Plan for Missiles in Romania,”
New York Times, February 6, 2010.
166 “Bulgaria Wants to Participate in US Missile Defense Shield: PM,” Agence France Presse, February 12, 2010;
“Russia Wants Bulgaria to Explain favor of U.S. Missile Shield,” Agence France Presse, February 14, 2010; “Russia’s
NATO Envoy Quashes Transdniestr Missiles Bid—Report,” Dow Jones International Press, February 16, 2010; “U.S.
Missile Shield Not Targeting Russia, Bulgaria Says,” Agence France Presse, February 17, 2010; “Dmitry Rogozin
Accuses Bulgarian Leadership of ‘Political Promiscuity,’” WPS: Defense and Security, February 17, 2010.
167 “U.S. New Missile Defense Plans Do Not Fit Logic of ‘Reset’ Policy—Russian MP,” Interfax, February 16, 2010.
168 CRS Report R41251, Ballistic Missile Defense and Offensive Arms Reductions: A Review of the Historical Record,
by Steven A. Hildreth and Amy F. Woolf.
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interceptors. After the signing ceremony, Sikorski stated that Russia would be permitted to
inspect the facilities. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Ryabkov declared that Moscow did not
believe that the potential threat from Iran warranted an anti-missile system such as the Obama
Administration was planning to put in place; Foreign Ministry Spokesman Andrei Nesterenko
echoed these comments, and also complained of insufficient consultation. However, a Russian
parliamentarian stated that “there will be detailed discussions [concerning the proposed SM-3
deployment], but they will not be confrontational.”169
Also in July 2010, it was reported that NATO Secretary General Rasmussen hoped not only to
have the Obama Administration’s PAA adopted as an additional alliance capability, but also to
have Russia participate with NATO in missile defense. Partnering with Russia would, in
Rasmussen’s words, “demonstrate that missile defense is not against Russia, but to protect
Russia.”170 In September, Russia was invited to attend the Lisbon summit meeting in November;
Rasmussen indicated he hoped that cooperation on missile defense could be taken up by the
NATO-Russia Council. Although some Russian officials continued to express misgivings about
the U.S./NATO missile defense plans, on October 20, 2010, President Medvedev announced that
he would attend the meeting in Lisbon.171
At their November 19-20, 2010, summit in Lisbon, NATO heads of state and government
officially identified territorial missile defense as a core alliance objective, and adopted it as a
NATO program in response to the threat of ballistic missile proliferation by potentially unfriendly
regimes. The NATO-Russia Council (NRC) meeting, held in conjunction with the alliance
meeting, endorsed cooperation between NATO and Moscow in the area of missile defense. The
NRC Joint Statement declared that
[w]e agreed to discuss pursuing missile defense cooperation. We agreed on a joint ballistic
missile threat assessment and to continue dialog in this area. The NRC will also resume
Theater Missile Defense Cooperation. We have tasked the NRC to develop a comprehensive
Joint Analysis of the future framework for missile defense cooperation. The progress of this
Analysis will be assessed at the June 2011 meeting of NRC Defense Ministers.172
The NATO-Russia accord did not constitute immediate full collaboration; rather, Russia approved
the involvement of Russian technicians in the planning and development of the system. President
Medvedev cautioned that missile defense cooperation must eventually amount to “a full-fledged
strategic partnership between Russia and NATO.” However, a State Department official
emphasized that, although Russia would be involved in the program, the United States would
“continue to reject any constraints or limitations on our missile defense plans.” In a televised
interview with Larry King, Prime Minister Putin indicated that if Russia perceives that the
PAA/NATO missile defense program is compromising Moscow’s nuclear deterrent, “Russia will
169 “Moscow Says European Missile Defense Unjustified,” RIA Novosti, July 6, 2010; “U.S. & NATO Good Intentions
at Discrepancy with Deeds,” ITAR-TASS World Service, July 5, 2010; “Moscow to Discuss Missile Defense with
Warsaw in Non-confrontational Way,” Interfax: Russia & CIS Military Newswire, July 5, 2010.
170 “Trust, But Make Military Plans/NATO and Russia,” The Economist. July 31, 2010. For additional information, see
“A Primer On transatlantic Missile Defense,” by Patricia A. Puttmann and Robert Bracknell, The Atlantic Council.
October 2010.
171 “Russia Voices Skepticism Over NATO Missile Shield,” Agence France Presse. October 15, 2010. “Russia Accepts
Invitation To Attend NATO Summit Meeting,” New York Times. October 20, 2010.
172 NATO-Russia Council Joint Statement. November 20, 2010. NATO website: http://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/
news_68871.htm?selectedLocale=en
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just have to protect itself using various means, including the deployment of new missile systems
to counter the new threats to our borders.”173
Analysts have argued that, despite its often-voiced reservations, Moscow may have believed itself
compelled to cooperate on missile defense; because Russia could “neither block the [emergence
of missile defense] in Europe nor restrict its capacity by means of treaty constraints, [instead] the
only way ... to influence its shape is to join the [missile defense] program on as favorable terms as
can possibly be snatched.”174 On December 20, 2010, Foreign Minister Lavrov indicated that
Russian acceptance of and participation in NATO missile defense would be fundamental to the
success of such a system—and for improved Russia-NATO relations.175 Although details as to
how Russia might cooperate technologically remain to be seen, it is clear that NATO and the
United States want to find ways to engage Russia in partnership on BMD.
In an address to the nation on November 30, 2010, Russian President Medvedev buttressed his
case for striking a deal with Washington on missile defense. The Russian leader emphasized that
the absence of such an agreement might lead to a new arms buildup—one that a financially
strapped Russia could ill afford: “We will either come to terms on missile defense and form a full-
fledged joint mechanism of cooperation or ... we will plunge into a new arms race and have to
think of deploying new strike means, and it’s obvious that this scenario will be very hard.” A
Russian political analyst noted that “we know that it was the arms race that led to the
disintegration of the Soviet Union.... Russia is not ready financially for a new arms race.”176
At the Lisbon summit, Medvedev suggested without elaborating that Moscow preferred a
“sectoral” approach to missile defense. The plan was later clarified as one under which Russia
and NATO would guard the airspace above their respective territories: Russia would be
responsible for taking out missiles crossing its territory toward Europe, while NATO countries
would shoot down over Europe any missiles headed toward Russia. Moscow reportedly is seeking
agreement on such a plan because it remains concerned that the Phased Adaptive Approach might
eventually compromise Russia’s nuclear forces.
Although Moscow is advocating a “common” system with sectoral defense responsibilities,
NATO Secretary General Rasmussen has insisted that NATO and Russia must maintain
independent systems, and that cooperation will consist of information sharing. The Russian
proposal reportedly is unacceptable to NATO for reasons of both sovereignty and capabilities.
According to Rasmussen, NATO “is responsible for protecting the territory of NATO member
states and for the safety of their populations. We do not intend to transfer that responsibility to
anyone else.” In addition, analysts note that current Russian missile defense technology lags far
173 “NATO Invites Russia To Join Europe Missile Shield,” The Washington Post, November 20, 2010. “Russia To Aid
NATO On Anti-Missile Network In Europe.’” The Washington Post, November 20, 2010. Europe and Eurasia: The
Obama Administration’s Efforts To Implement the European Phased Adaptive Approach. Testimony before the House
Armed Services Subcommittee on Strategic Forces by U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Frank A. Rose.
December 2, 2010. Transcript of TV Interview Vladimir Putin to CNN’s Larry King. RIA-Oreanda News. December 2,
2010.
174 Prospects For Joint Russia-NATO Missile Defense System. By Beata Gorka-Winter, Robert Smigielski. Bulletin of
the Polish Institute of International Affairs. No. 129 (205). October 29, 2010.
175 “Success of Russia-NATO Relations Improvement Process Not Guaranteed - Lavrov Tells Interfax,” Interfax Russia
and CIS General Newswire. December 20, 2010.
176 “Russian President Warns of New Arms Race,” Washington Post, December 1, 2010. p. A8.
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behind that of the NATO countries.177 But Moscow has stated that it wants specific details about
the arrangement. Russian leaders claim that they have not received “a direct and clear”
description of Russia’s role.178 Moscow is also now seeking written assurances from the United
States and NATO that the interceptors not be aimed at Russia.179
In March 2011, the Russian media reported a view that appeared to be somewhat at variance with
other comments of the country’s political and military leaders. According to an official within the
Russian general staff, interceptors deployed in Poland would not represent a threat to Russia’s
nuclear force, as they would only be capable of shooting down mid- and short-range missiles.180
Negotiations over a new missile defense architecture continued through the first half of the year.
Vice President Joseph Biden met with President Medvedev and Prime Minister Putin in mid-
March 2011, and Admiral Mike Mullen, then Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, met with his
Russian counterpart in early May 2011; and at the end of the month, President Obama and
Medvedev discussed the issue during the G-8 meeting in Deauville, France.
On June 1, 2011, during a meeting in Bulgaria of a working group on missile defense, Russian
Duma International Affairs Committee Chairman Konstantin Kosachyov warned that the
European missile defenses would be inoperable without Russian participation. He also questioned
whether the presumed threat justified the “colossal” costs of deploying a missile defense system.
On June 2, President Medvedev expressed impatience with the pace of ongoing negotiations,
stating “So far, I’m not pleased with how the U.S. and all NATO countries reacted to my
proposals because we are losing time.”181
Russia also expressed objections to the announcement in that Turkey would permit missile
defense radar to be based on its soil, and to Spain’s decision in October to permit Aegis ships to
be stationed at its the naval port at Rota.182
Discussions in the second half of 2011 centered around two major sticking points: Moscow’s
proposal for sectoral missile defense, and its insistence upon written legal guarantees that the
missile shield would not be directed against Russia. Both proposals are unacceptable to NATO.
As Secretary-General Rasmussen noted, acceding to the first demand would violate the very
concept of Article 5, NATO’s mutual defense clause, and would be equivalent to “outsourcing”
missile defense for the treaty area. Similarly, the alliance has rejected the demand for written
legal guarantees because it would permit Russia to determine alliance defense doctrine and would
177 “Medvedev Wants Missile Defense Carve-up Of Europe: Reports,” Agence France Presse, November 22, 2010.
“NATO, Russia Missile Systems To Stay Separate: NATO Chief,” Agence France Presse, January 20, 2011. “NATO,
Russia vow unity on terrorism, disagree on shield,” Agence France Presse, January 26, 2011. “The Boogeyman the
Kremlin Loves To Hate,” The Moscow Times, February 8, 2011.
178 CRS Report R41549, Missile Defense and NATO’s Lisbon Summit, by Steven A. Hildreth and Carl Ek. “NATO,
Russia Missile Systems To Stay Separate: NATO Chief,” Agence France Presse, January 20, 2011. “Russia Waiting
For NATO Response To European Missile Defense Offer—Medvedev,” Interfax: Russia & CIS Military Newswire,
January 24, 2011.
179 “Russia Seeks Pledge From NATO On Missile Defense,” New York Times, May 21, 2011.
180 “US Plans To Deploy ABM In Poland ‘No Threat To Russia’—Russian Source,” Interfax, March 5, 2011.
181 “Without Russia, European Missile Defense Is Doomed,” The Voice of Russia, June 1, 2011. “Medvedev Says
Russia, US ‘Losing Time’ On Missile Defense,” Space Daily, June 2, 2011.
182 “Moscow Anxious On Turkey’s Shield Role,” Hurriyet Daily News [Turkey], July 28, 2011. “Russia Says U.S.
Approach to Missile Defense ‘Unacceptable,’” Bloomberg Government, October 6, 2011.
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tie the hands of future political and military leaders. As an alternative, U.S. Under Secretary of
State Ellen Tauscher proposed that Russia be offered “written assurances” that the EPAA would
not be directed against Russia.
In November 2011, Russian officials renewed their objections to NATO’s plans to proceed with it
missile defense plans, and countered by indicating that Moscow would develop new missiles
equipped with counter-measures capable of foiling missile defenses. The Russians also once more
said that they might deploy Iskander missiles in Kaliningrad. In addition, Moscow announced its
intention to base a radar station in the Russian exclave, a move that one Russian analyst argued
was already planned. Finally, officials indicated that Russia might withdraw from the New
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty and disallow NATO use of the northern supply routes to
Afghanistan.183
In response, at the NATO-Russia Council meeting of foreign ministers in early December, U.S.
and NATO officials reiterated their intention to continue with the development of EPAA. NATO
Secretary General Rasmussen argued that “It would definitely be a waste of valuable money if
Russia started to invest heavily in countermeasures against an artificial enemy that doesn’t
exist.… That money could … be invested to the benefit of the Russian people in job creation and
modernization.”184
Both Russian and NATO officials suggested that the next NATO-Russia Council meeting,
planned to be held in May 2012 in conjunction with the NATO summit in Chicago, might be
cancelled if there were no agreement on missile defense cooperation. Russian Deputy Foreign
Minister Rybakov said that a final decision over attendance would be made after the March 4,
2012, presidential election.185
Despite the seeming lack of progress on the issue, in early February it was announced that Russia
and NATO would conduct a joint, computer-based missile defense exercise in Germany the
following month.
The Munich Security Conference in February 2012 saw the unveiling of the Euro-Atlantic
Security Initiative, a series of proposals developed by a commission headed by former German
Deputy Foreign Minister Wolfgang Ischinger, former Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov, and
former U.S. Senator Sam Nunn. Regarding missile defense, the commission recommended the
sharing of radar information to provide early warning of missile attacks; the commission also
proposed that the parties would be responsible for protecting their own territories.186
Some observers have questioned whether the Russian leadership might have realized at the outset
that their proposals would be unacceptable, but stuck to them anyway because they never
intended to cooperate on missile defense and wished to portray the alliance as unreasonable.
Other observers speculate that the hard-line stance might be motivated by domestic political
considerations. Finally, some argue that Russia may be hoping to create a rift within NATO; they
183 Medvedev Mollifies the West. The Moscow Times. November 20, 2011. NATO Rebuffs Russian Missile-Defense
Threats. Washington Post. December 8, 2011.
184 Russia and NATO Trade Barbs Over Missile Shield. Agence France Presse. December 7, 2011.
185 Russia May Skip 2012 NATO Summit—Foreign Ministry. RIA Novosti. December 9, 2011. NATO May Scrap
Bilateral Summit With Russia Over Lack Of Progress On Missile Shield. IHS Global Insight Daily Analysis. January
27, 2012.
186 Missile Defense Would Be ‘Game Changer’ For US, Russia—Report. Reuters News. February 4, 2012.
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note that in June 2011, Russian Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov stated that the missile
defense debate depended on Washington’s views, claiming that “[t]his is a U.S. position. There is
a number of [NATO] countries expressing only concern. We could have received their
support.”187
In March 2012, Medvedev said Russia would adopt its nuclear forces—in phases—to account for
upgrades of the EPAA, arguing that “we are not closing the door on dialog, [b]ut we need to
prepare ourselves.”188 A few days later, in a side meeting during an arms control summit in Korea,
President Obama discussed missile defense with Medvedev—in the vicinity of a “hot”
microphone. During the conversation, Obama told the Russian leader “This is my last election,
and after my election I’ll have more flexibility.” Medvedev replied that he understood, and that he
would transmit that point to “Vladimir”—Prime Minister Putin. Obama’s comments were sharply
criticized by presidential candidate Mitt Romney as “caving” to Russia. Representative Turner,
chairman of the House Armed Services Subcommittee on Strategic Forces, requested a
clarification of the remarks. Vice President Joseph Biden later argued that, given the political
environment in both countries during an election year, President Obama had “stated the
obvious.”189
During a conference on missile defense hosted in early May 2012 by Russia, senior State
Department official Helen Tauscher said that “[w]e cannot agree to preconditions outlined by the
Russian government. We cannot agree to any limitations on our missile defense deployment.…
We are able to agree, however, to a political statement that our missile defenses are not directed at
Russia.” Later, at the same conference, Russian Armed Forces Chief of Staff General Nikolai
Makarov indicated that “[w]e’re open to consider different kinds of guarantees.” However,
Makarov also warned that, in response to continued development of EPAA, “a decision to use
destructive force preemptively will be taken if the situation worsens.”190
In a Wall Street Journal editorial in mid-May, Senator Jon Kyl argued that the Obama
Administration should refuse to provide guarantees to Russia that EPAA would not be intended to
guard against Russia. Senator Kyl noted that the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty had been
followed by a large buildup of offensive weapons. He argued that Russia is not concerned about a
threat from Iran, but about “degrading our missile-defense capability,” and pointed out that
Moscow has not provided guarantees that its nuclear assets are not aimed at the United States.
Other observers, however, maintain that an offer of assurances would facilitate cooperation on
missile defense between NATO and Moscow. They also note that, absent guarantees, the further
deployment and upgrading of NATO missile defenses in Europe would appear to Russia to
threaten “strategic stability.”191
187 “Russia May Develop Nuclear Offensive,” RIA Novosti, June 8, 2011.
188 Medvedev Urges Military To Parry U.S. Missile Shield. International Herald Tribune. March 22, 2012.
189 Obama To Medvedev: No Missile Deal Before the Vote. Wall Street Journal. March 26, 2012. Obama ‘Stated the
Obvious’ In Russia Remarks: Biden. Agence France Presse. April 1, 2012.
190 Russia To Make Hi-tech Case Against NATO Missile Shield. Reuters. May 2, 2012. Moscow Raises Alarm On
European Missile-Defense Plan. Wall Street Journal. May 3, 2012. Russia’s Military Threatens Preemptive Strike If
NATO Goes Ahead With Missile Plan. Canadian Press. May 3, 2012.
191 Missile Defense is Self-Defense. Wall Street Journal. May 15, 2012. Seeking a Cooperative Missile Shield. Wall
Street Journal. May 25, 2012. Missile Offense and Missile Defense. Center for Strategic and International Studies.
May 17, 2012.
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Newly reelected President Putin, claiming he needed to remain at home to form a new
government, declined to attend either the NATO summit in Chicago or the G-8 meeting, held in
Camp David, MD—both were in late May 2012. At the NATO summit, the alliance declared
EPAA to have an “interim capability.” It is scheduled to achieve “initial operational capability” in
2015, and “full operational capability” by 2018.192 In their summit declaration, alliance leaders
proposed
to develop a transparency regime based upon a regular exchange of information about the
current respective missile defense capabilities of NATO and Russia. Such concrete missile
defense cooperation is the best means to provide Russia with the assurances it seeks
regarding NATO’s missile defense plans and capabilities. In this regard, we today reaffirm
that the NATO missile defense in Europe will not undermine strategic stability. NATO
missile defense is not directed against Russia and will not undermine Russia’s strategic
deterrence capabilities…. While regretting recurrent Russian statements on possible
measures directed against NATO’s missile defense system, we welcome Russia’s
willingness to continue dialogue.193
The Kremlin appeared to remain unsatisfied. On May 24, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman
Alexander Lukashevich said that, while the declaration was “a step in the right direction …
political statements cannot serve as a foundation for cooperation. Reliable and based on precise
military and technical parameters, legal guarantees of the non-targeting of the deploying missile
defense network against the Russian nuclear deterrence forces are essential to us.”194 However,
this would appear to contradict General Marakov’s statement (see above) three weeks earlier that
Russia was “open to consider different kinds of guarantees.”
In response to Russian statements about developing strategic countermeasures, Secretary General
Rasmussen told Russian officials that NATO had no intention of attacking their country, and
advised that they not to step up their defense budget to defend against an “artificial enemy.” Not
long thereafter, however, former Russian NATO Ambassador and current Deputy Prime Minister
Dmitry Rogozin warned that Moscow would “create a system of piercing and suppressing any
missile defense. If there’s anyone who thinks we can be surrounded with an anti-missile wall, we
were breaking a door into Europe back in the times of Peter [the Great] and now we’ll break
down everything the whole wall, if anyone tries to isolate us or bring us to our knees.”195
In a sideline meeting of the G-20, Presidents Putin and Obama discussed missile defense, among
other issues. They issued a joint statement, declaring that “[d]espite differences in assessments,
we have agreed to continue a joint search for solutions to challenges in the field of missile
defense.” However, an aide to President Putin stated that “[i]t will be possible to resume authentic
192 NATO Activates Missile Shield, Reaches Out To Russia. Agence France Presse. May 20, 2012. Fact Sheet:
Chicago Summit—NATO Capabilities. The White House. Office of the Press Secretary. May 20, 2012.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2012/05/20/fact-sheet-chicago-summit-nato-capabilities.
193 Chicago Summit Declaration. May 20, 2012. NATO website, http://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/
official_texts_87593.htm?mode=pressrelease.
194 Moscow Still Needs Legal Guarantees NATO Missile Defense Not Aimed At It—Lukashevich. Interfax. May 24,
2012.
195 Rasmussen Tells Russia Not to Waste Money on Missile Countermeasures. Interfax. June 6, 2012. Russia To ‘Break
Down’ NATO Missile Defense ‘Wall’—Rogozin. Interfax. July 2, 2012.
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and detailed political discussions of missile defense only after the presidential election in the
United States.” In the meantime, he added, discussions would continue at the working level.196
Russia has continued to press for a joint missile defense system, and for written guarantees. As
noted above, the May 2012 NATO Chicago summit declaration reaffirmed that the alliance’s
missile defense capability would not be directed against Russia, and would not compromise
strategic stability. But in July, Russia’s acting NATO ambassador reiterated Moscow’s stance that
this was “not enough. It must be upheld by explanations as to why it is so, what parameters of this
system need to be taken into consideration, and how Russia, regardless of what it hears, could
judge by itself that these parameters are being observed.” Perhaps in response, NATO Secretary
General Rasmussen on July 16 pointed out that 15 years ago, the alliance and Russia had signed a
statement declaring that they “would not use force against each other. … We are still committed
to this declaration.”197
In an media interview in late July, Prime Minister Medvedev charged that some European leaders
did not really share the U.S. conviction on the necessity of missile defense, arguing that “they
told me in private that they do not need all that but their U.S. friends, being senior partners in
NATO, are forcing it upon them.” He added that “U.S. lawmakers on Capitol Hill are saying
almost openly: of course, it is against you. This is symptomatic.”198
Finally, Moscow has also expressed concern over U.S. plans to develop components of its missile
defense system in Asia.
U.S.-Russia Economic Ties199
U.S.-Russian trade and investment flows have increased in the post-Cold War period, reflecting
the changed U.S.-Russian relationship. Many experts have suggested that the relationship could
expand even further. U.S.-Russian trade, at least U.S. imports, has grown appreciably. The surge
in the value of imports is largely attributable to the rise in the world prices of oil and other natural
resources—which comprise the large share of U.S. imports from Russia—and not to an increase
in the volume of imports. U.S. exports span a range of products including meat, machinery parts,
and aircraft parts. U.S. imports increased more than 244%, from $7.8 billion to $26.8 billion from
2000 to 2008, and U.S. exports rose 343%, from $2.1 billion to $9.3 billion. However, U.S.
exports and imports with Russia declined substantially in 2009, as a result of the global financial
crisis and economic downturn, but increased in 2010 as both countries have shown signs of
recovery.
196 US, Russia to Seek ‘Joint Solutions’ To Missile Defense Row. Agence France Presse. June 18, 2012. Russia Hopes
to Resume Missile Defense Talks After US Elections—Aide. ITAR-TASS World Service. June 22, 2012.
197 Moscow Insists On Legal Guarantees That European Missile Shield Not Targeted Against It—Diplomat. Interfax.
July 12, 2012. Rasmussen Notes Lack of Progress with Russia on Missile Defense System. Interfax. July 16, 2012.
198 Medvedev Not Ruling Out New Arms Race by 2018. Interfax. July 30, 2012.
199 Prepared by William H. Cooper, Specialist in International Trade and Finance.
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Table 1. U.S. Merchandise Trade with Russia, 1994-2011
(in billions of dollars)
U.S.
U.S.
U.S.
U.S.
Trade
U.S.
U.S.
Trade
Year
Exports
Imports
Balances Year
Exports
Imports
Balances
1994
2.6 3.2 -0.6
2003 2.4 8.6 -6.2
1995
2.8 4.0 -1.2
2004 3.0 11.9 -8.9
1996
3.3 3.6 -0.3
2005 3.9 15.3
-11.3
1997
3.4 4.3 -0.9
2006 4.7 19.8
-15.1
1998
3.6 5.7 -2.1
2007 7.4 19.4
-12.0
1999
2.1 5.9 -3.8
2008 9.3 26.8
-17.5
2000
2.1 7.7 -5.6
2009 5.4 18.2
-12.8
2001
2.7 6.3 -3.5
2010 6.0 25.7
-19.7
2002
2.4 6.8
-4.4
2011 8.3 34.6
-26.3
Source: Compiled by CRS from U.S. Department of Commerce, U.S. Census Bureau data. FT900.
Note: Major U.S. exports: machinery; vehicles; meat; aircraft. Major U.S. imports: mineral fuels; inorganic
chemicals aluminum; steel.
Russia accounted for 1.6% of U.S. imports and 0.6% of U.S. exports in 2011, and the United
States accounted for 3.7% of Russian exports and 5.2% of Russian imports.200 Russia was the
37th-largest export market and 17th-largest source of imports for the United States in 2011.
According to Russian government data, by the end of 2011, the United States accounted for less
than 1.2% of total accumulated foreign direct and portfolio investments in Russia. However, the
first four countries were Switzerland (48.2%), Cyprus (10.6%), the Netherlands (8.8%), and
Luxembourg (2.5%) suggesting that more than 70% of the investments might have been
repatriated Russian funds.201
Russia and the United States have never been major economic partners, and it unlikely that the
significance of bilateral trade will increase much in the near term. However, in some areas, such
as agriculture, Russia has become an important market for U.S. exports. Russia is the largest
foreign market for U.S. poultry. Furthermore, U.S. exports to Russia of energy exploration
equipment and technology, as well as industrial and agricultural equipment, have increased as the
dollar has declined in value. Russian demand for these products will likely grow as old equipment
and technology need to be replaced and modernized. Russia’s significance as a supplier of U.S.
imports will also likely remain small given the lack of international competitiveness of Russian
production outside of oil, gas, and other natural resources. U.S.-Russian investment relations
could grow tighter if Russia’s business climate improves; however, U.S. business concerns about
the Russian government’s seemingly capricious intervention in energy and other sectors could
dampen the enthusiasm of all but adventuresome investors.
The greater importance of Russia’s economic policies and prospects to the United States lies in
their indirect effect on the overall economic and political environment in which the United States
200 World Trade Atlas. Global Trade Information Services, Inc.
201 Russian Federal Statistics Service. http://www.gks.ru.
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and Russia operate. From this perspective, Russia’s continuing economic stability and growth can
be considered positive for the United States. Because financial markets are interrelated, chaos in
even some of the smaller economies can cause uncertainty throughout the rest of the world. Such
was the case during Russia’s financial meltdown in 1998 and more recently with the 2008-2009
crisis. Promotion of economic stability in Russia has been a basis for U.S. support for Russia’s
membership in international economic organizations, including the IMF, the World Bank, and the
WTO. As a major oil producer and exporter, Russia influences world oil prices that affect U.S.
consumers.
U.S. Assistance to Russia
U.S. assistance to Russia as a percentage of all aid to Eurasia has declined over the years, but
historically Russia has received about one-half of all U.S. assistance to Eurasia. From FY1992
through FY2012, the U.S. government has budgeted over $18 billion in assistance to Russia (see
Tables 2-4, below). The bulk of this assistance (nearly 60%) has been expended on CTR (Nunn-
Lugar) and other security-related programs aiming to prevent the proliferation of WMD, combat
drug-trafficking and transnational crime, foster law enforcement and criminal justice sector
reforms, and support reconciliation and recovery efforts in Chechnya and other areas of the North
Caucasus. Other aid has been provided for democratization, market reform, and health needs.202
Annual foreign operations appropriations bills have contained conditions that Russia is expected
to meet in order to receive assistance:
• A restriction on aid to Russia was approved in the FY1998 appropriations act and
each year thereafter, prohibiting any aid to the central government (local and
regional government assistance is permitted) unless the President certifies that
Russia has not implemented a law discriminating against religious minorities.
Other democratization and human rights conditions were added for FY2008 and
retained thereafter in the face of abuses during the run-up to the December 2007
State Duma election. Although religious freedom has been generally respected in
recent years, successive administrations have issued waivers to overcome the
restrictions on aid because of ongoing problems of democratization and other
human rights.
• Since FY1996, direct assistance to the government of Russia has hinged on
whether it is continuing the sale of nuclear reactor technology to Iran. As a result,
60% of planned U.S. assistance to Russia’s central government has been cut.
• The FY2001 foreign aid bill prohibited 60% of aid to the central government of
Russia if it was not cooperating with international investigations of war crime
allegations in Chechnya or providing access to NGOs doing humanitarian work
in Chechnya. Possibly as a result of Russian cooperation with the United States
in its war on terrorism, the war crime provision was dropped in subsequent years.
• A condition in the FREEDOM Support Act prohibits aid to a Soviet successor
state that has violated the territorial integrity of another successor state. A
presidential waiver for Russia has been exercised, most recently in May 2011.
202 See CRS Report RL32866, U.S. Assistance to the Former Soviet Union, by Curt Tarnoff.
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Table 2. U.S. Government Funds Budgeted for Assistance to Russia, FY1992-FY1999
(in millions of dollars)
Fiscal Year/
Program
Area 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
Economic
Growth
84.68
137.21
1187.92 231.37 72.69 39.35 51.21 74.0
Governing Justly
& Democratically
33.93 63.82 238.65 70.8 49.97 38.16 67.27 83.85
Humanitarian
Assistance
167.89
1060.4 39.49 48.44 35.34 0.93 6.34
1,167.34
Investing in
People
13.1 8.31 79.85 12.67 10.98 10.59 10.55 15.42
Peace & Security
28.81 182.71 361.69 203.19 323.18 456.21 461.36 790.05
Program Support
0 0
4.0
0.44 0 0 0 0
Cross-Cutting
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total
2320.41 3445.45 3905.6 2561.91 2488.16 2542.24 2594.73 4,129.66
Source: U.S. Department of State, Office of the Coordinator of U.S. Assistance to Europe and Eurasia.
Notes: Includes “all spigot” program and agency assistance. Classified assistance is excluded.
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Table 3. U.S. Government Funds Budgeted for Assistance to Russia, FY2000-FY2010
(in millions of dollars)
Fiscal Year/
Total
Program
FY1992-
Area
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
2010
FY2010
Economic
58.65 60.13 60.62
54.47 33.93 9.54 7.71 3.41 1.21 0.91 1.3
2170.3
Growth
Governing
Justly &
68.26 82.26 79.89 79.98 64.31 64.04 78.7 57.41 67.88 60.57 64.6 1414.3
Democratically
Humanitarian
243.1 92.37 23.83 26.1 19.97 1.5 13.23 0.0 3.67 4.2 1.7 2955.8
Assistance
Investing in
15.88 21.92 21.92 19.36 21.31 28.59 23.82 23.95 29.64 23.71 9.9 366.0
People
Peace &
667.52 694.86 822.79 727.59 802.43 897.75 854.8 926.66 779.58 1093.58 790.5 11865.3
Security
Program
0 0 0 0 0 0
0.1
1.25
1.41
7.84
5.9
20.9
Support
Cross-Cutting
0 4.19 5.49 5.0 2.71 6.88 4.48
0
0
0 0 28.74
Total
3053.41 2956.73 3016.54 2915.5 2948.66 3013.3 2988.84 3019.68 2891.39 3199.81 2883.9 18821.4
As % of
48
Eurasia aid
Source: U.S. Department of State, Office of the Coordinator of U.S. Assistance to Europe and Eurasia.
Note: Includes Freedom Support Act and other program and agency assistance.
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Russian Political, Economic, and Security Issues and U.S. Interests
Table 4. Assistance to Russia, FY2011-FY2012, and the FY2013 Request
(in millions of dollars)
Fiscal Year/
Program Area
FY2011 Actual
FY2012 Estimate
FY2013 Request
Economic Growth
0.65
0.7
0.5
Governing Justly &
37.24 34.56
31.81
Democratically
Investing in People
18.59
17.89
10.75
Peace & Security
9.66
9.78
8.9
Total 66.14
62.94
51.96
As Percent of Eurasian
12 12
12
Assistance
Source: U.S. Department of State. Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations, Annex: Regional
Perspectives, FY2013, April 3. 2012.
Notes: Includes the Assistance for Europe, Eurasia, and Central Asia (AEECA) Account, Foreign Military
Financing (FMF), Global Health and Child Survival (GHCS) funds, International Military Education and Training
(IMET) funds, and the State Department’s Non-proliferation, Anti-terrorism, Demining, and Related Programs
(NADR). In FY2013, AEECA funds were incorporated into Economic Support Fund and International Narcotics
Control and Law Enforcement programs. Amounts do not include Defense or Energy Department programs.
Author Contact Information
Jim Nichol, Coordinator
Amy F. Woolf
Specialist in Russian and Eurasian Affairs
Specialist in Nuclear Weapons Policy
jnichol@crs.loc.gov, 7-2289
awoolf@crs.loc.gov, 7-2379
William H. Cooper
Steven A. Hildreth
Specialist in International Trade and Finance
Specialist in Missile Defense
wcooper@crs.loc.gov, 7-7749
shildreth@crs.loc.gov, 7-7635
Carl Ek
Paul Belkin
Specialist in International Relations
Analyst in European Affairs
cek@crs.loc.gov, 7-7286
pbelkin@crs.loc.gov, 7-0220
Steven Woehrel
Derek E. Mix
Specialist in European Affairs
Analyst in European Affairs
swoehrel@crs.loc.gov, 7-2291
dmix@crs.loc.gov, 7-9116
Acknowledgments
Some portions of this report are based on the work of former Specialist in Russian and Eurasian
Affairs Stuart Goldman.
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